466
The Green Bag.
Gog and Magog of New. York and the guard
ian patron of its power, privileges and im
munities. Local history proudly refers to
the patriotism and wisdom of Recorder
Varick; to the deserved popularity of Re
corders Riker and Hackett; to the pol
ished sway of Recorder Jones, and the early
and the later Hoffman; to the learned and
oven Chesterfieldian Tallmadge; to the pol
itic James M. Smith .(lately sketched in THE
GREEN BAG), and to the impressive Smyth,
now a justice of the Supreme Court. All
have been of, and from, and for, the people,
and gifted with that knowledge of human
nature so necessary in a judge who tempers
justice with mercy when deciding upon the
crimes or pecadilloes, and in the appor
tionment of punishments appertaining to his
erring constituents. The name of Goff —
as that of the mysterious regicide in early
colonial times — is well know to New Kngland history, and it is now a household word
in New York business and professional cir
cles.
Mr. Goff in his seventeenth year decided
to turn towards the legal profession and
was fortunate enough to obtain for its study
the patronage and educational supervision
of the late Samuel G. Courtney, who after
having served as district attorney in Albany
had removed to New York City and there
became one of President's Lincoln's Federal
district attorneys. Young GofF united the
duties of supervisory messenger and clerk
with those of student; and naturally his
bent of mind turned toward criminal juris
prudence, as its influence was prominent in
the Courtney office. Admitted to the bar
in the spring of 1876, he was offered by Mr.
Courtney the post of managing clerk at a
tempting salary. The stipend was a temp
tation, but the young attorney thought —
similarly to the maxim about the mortgage
— "once a managing clerk perhaps always
a managing clerk," and resolved to " hang
his banner on the outward wall," when per
haps the cry would be, as regards clients,
"still they come." The Hamilton building on Broadway opposite the City Hall was then a favorite locality for offices, and thither he repaired in search of one; and, find ing a room suited to his slender purse, pre sented himself to the landlord, John C. Ham ilton, — son of the great Alexander, —-as a tenant. The former asked security for the rent, which young Goff was delicate about asking from friends; so he paid a month's installment, and said, " If I am unable to pay the second month you can turn me out, and it being summer time you can readily ob tain my successor for the fall campaign." Goff was already a tactician, and he charmed the landlord by pleasant references to his family name and relationship to the founder of the Republic, so that the prover bially hard-hearted landlord was induced to say, " I see that you are a likely young man and I'll risk it." There Goff continued in private practice for a decade, and slowly prospering. While a law student he had become identified with the current Fenian movement, and had made many friends in Irish business circles, which brought him clients. A Fenian episode wherein he was actor is interestingly worth a digression. Disaf fection with the measures of the British government toward Ireland had crept among the officers and privates of a dra goon regiment of Her Majesty stationed in Dublin, and some of them were tried and convicted of treason and sent to the Aus tralian penal settlement. Among these were John Boyle O'Reilly and a color sergeant who had carried the flag into the charge of the six hundred at Balaklava. Incipient bard O'Reilly was a very handsome soldier and man. There came love passages be tween him and the daughter of his Scotch warder which resulted in her planning for him some personal liberty. One day walk ing on the beach he observed a large boat about to land from a ship in the offing, fly ing the American flag. O'Reilly lingered