"Dicey's intellectual and critical powers were accompanied by a lovable simplicity of character and a lively wit. "It is better to be flippant than dull" he used to tell his pupils, and it was the force of his epigrams that made his early reputation as a speaker in the Oxford Union. His remarkable faculty of exposition, acquired by persistent revision of his compositions, was sometimes marred by a tendency to redundancy of which he could not rid himself."
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Academics from EnglandLawyers from EnglandUniversity of Oxford facultyUniversity of Oxford alumniJudges from England
Original Language: English
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R. S. Rait, 'Dicey, Albert Venn (1835–1922)', The Dictionary of National Biography, 1922–1930, ed. J. R. H. Weaver (1937), p. 261
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/A._V._Dicey
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A. V. Dicey
Albert Venn Dicey (February 4, 1835 – April 7, 1922) was a British jurist and constitutional theorist who wrote An Introduction to the Study of the Law of the Constitution (1885). The principles it expounds are considered part of the uncodified British constitution.
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