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Edmund Sidney Pollock Haynes (26 September 1877 – 5 January 1949) was a British lawyer and writer. The son of a London solicitor, Haynes was a King's Scholar at Eton College and a winner of a Brackenbury Scholarship at Balliol College. Haynes practised in the same offices at 9 New Square, Lincoln's Inn, where his father had practised. A prolific author, he was a well-known figure in London's literary circles from 1900 to his death in 1949. Hilaire Belloc's ''The Servile State'' is dedicated to Haynes. ==Publications== *''Standards of Taste in Art'' (1904). *''Religious Persecution, a Study in Political Psychology'' (1904; popular edition, 1906). *''Early Victorian and Other Papers'' (1908). *''Divorce Problems of To-Day'' (1912). *''The Belief in Personal Immortality'' (1913 and 1925). *''A Study in Bereavement, a Comedy in One Act'' (1914). *''Divorce as it might be'' (1915). *''The Decline of Liberty in England'' (1916). *''Personalia'' (1918 and 1927). *''The Case for Liberty'' (1919). *''Concerning Solicitors'' (1920). *''The Enemies of Liberty'' (1923). *''Fritto Misto'' (1924). *''Lycurgus or The Future of Law'' (1925). *''Much Ado about Women'' (1927). *''A Lawyer's Notebook'' (1932). *''More from a Lawyer's Notebook'' (1933). *''The Lawyer's Last Notebook'' (1934). *''Divorce and its Problems'' (with Derek Walker-Smith, 1935). *''Life, Law, and Letters'' (1936). 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「E. S. P. Haynes」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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