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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 December 2018
1. Shakespeare, William, Twelfth Night, act 2, sc. 5, line 156 (1599).Google Scholar
2. The Model Rules are scheduled to be voted on at the August 1981 annual meeting of the ABA. See Discussion Draft (n.p.: American Bar Association Commission on Evaluation of Professional Standards, Jan. 30, 1980).Google Scholar
3. Cavers, David F., Book Reviews in Law Reviews: An Endangered Species, 77 Mich. L. Rev. 327, 332 (1979).Google Scholar
4. Spiegel, Mark, Lawyering and Client Decisionmaking: Informed Consent and the Legal Profession, 128 U. Pa. L. Rev. 41 (1979).Google Scholar
5. Both the original Canon 6 of the 1908 ABA Canons of Professional Ethics and Judge Sharswood's 1854 book Professional Ethics (a forerunner of the Canons) in effect viewed conflicting loyalties as among the important facts clients would want to consider when choosing a lawyer. Disclosure to the client and client consent was usually adequate because the client's choices were paramount. See Drinker, Henry S., Legal Ethics 311 (New York: Columbia University Press, 1953); George Sharswood, An Essay on Professional Ethics 111–12 (3d ed. Philadelphia: T. & J. W. Johnson & Co., 1869).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
6. See, e.g., K. N. Llewellyn, The Bramble Bush: Some Lectures on Law and Its Study 2–4, 14–15 (New York: Columbia University School of Law, 1930 [Tentative Printing for the Use of Students at Columbia University School of Law]).Google Scholar