Friedman has called Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr.'s
The Common Law (Boston, 1881) “the most important 19
th century [law] book.”
Id., 545. But, as Commager pointed out, Holmes’ “thought was a generation ahead of his time,” and Holmes only
began his thirty years on the Supreme Court in 1902. See
Commager, Henry Steele,
The American Mind, supra, 376. Thus, Holmes was a genuine figure of the twentieth century.
The Common Law remains in print. See the excellent edition by Mark DeWolfe Howe, O.W. Holmes,
The Common Law (ed.
Howe, M. DeWolfe, London, 1968). Also powerfully impressive are Holmes’ less well known legal addresses, including several on legal scholarship and the legal profession in O.W. Holmes,
Speeches (Boston, 1891). See also O.W. Holmes,
Collected Legal Papers (
Laski, Harold J. ed., New York, 1920). Holmes’ brilliance is also preserved in his great correspondence with Sir Frederick Pollock and with Harold Laski. See
Holmes - Pollock Letters (ed.
Howe, Mark De Wolfe, Cambridge, 1961);
Holmes - Laski Letters 1916-1935 (ed.
Howe, Mark DeWolfe, Cambridge, 1923). See also “The Early Critical and Philosophical Writings of Justice Holmes” (ed. with introduction by Michael H. Hoffheimer, 30
Boston College Law Review (1989) 1221). For a modern analysis, see the incomparable Holmes Lectures of 1981 of Benjamin Kaplan, Patrick Atiyah, and Jay Vetter printed in
Holmes and The Common Law: A Century Later (Cambridge, 1983). There is also David J. Seipp's brilliant essay on the 125
th anniversary of “The Path of the Law.” See David J. Seipp, “Holmes's Path,” 77
Boston Univ. L. Rev.
515 (1997), and the fine work of my valued colleague, Catharine Wells. See
Wells, Catharine P., “Old-Fashioned Postmodernism and the Legal Theories of Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr.,” 63
Brooklyn Law Rev.
63 (1997). Finally, there is Catherine Drinker Bowen's wonderful
Yankee from Olympus (Boston,
1944), a biography as insightful as it is accessible.
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