Part, Chapter
1 I,I | commerce; I should be neither a judge nor a deputy-mayor. Do you
2 I,I | If he doesn't know~how to judge du Tillet he must be blind;
3 I,I | own lead. You have been judge in the department of~commerce,
4 I,II | perfumer had just~been elected judge in the commercial courts:
5 I,II | Saint-Denis), Popinot the judge,~brother of Madame Ragon,
6 I,II | Pillerault and Popinot the~judge, all the people of his own
7 I,II | superficially, and~were unable to judge him. Moreover, the twenty
8 I,III| family, was at~this time a judge in the Lower courts of the
9 I,III| brought up by~his uncle the judge, presented a union of qualities
10 I,III| nephew of Monsieur Popinot, a judge of the civil courts, nephew
11 I,IV | Fontaine, Monsieur Lebas, judge and president of the Court
12 I,IV | an esteemed commercial judge, a~deputy-mayor, and an
13 I,V | his niece Birotteau, the judge Popinot, Joseph~Lebas, and
14 I,V | Their brother, Popinot, the judge,~knows nothing about it;
15 I,V | bourgeoisie, and by his uncle the judge, had been led,~through his
16 I,VI | future fortune. Popinot the judge had once done a great service
17 I,VI | capital offence. Popinot the judge, who presided at~the trial,
18 I,VI | him up in the affair. A judge~anxious to please the powers
19 I,VI | he owed his life to the judge, cherished the grief of
20 I,VI | As he could not thank a judge for doing justice, he went
21 I,VI | gift of Popinot's uncle the judge, made up the furniture.
22 I,VI | of my friend Popinot is a judge," said Gaudissart to Finot,~"
23 I,VI | evening, gentlemen," said the judge.~ ~The illustrious Gaudissart
24 I,VI | much luxury here," said the judge, gravely, looking~round
25 I,VI | here, monsieur?" said the judge, recognizing the commercial~
26 I,VI | literature of wigs." The judge~looked at Finot. "Monsieur,"
27 I,VI | well, my sons," said the judge, to whom these words explained~
28 I,VI | quite right," said the judge.~ ~"Look here," said Gaudissart
29 I,VI | of the prospectus.~ ~The judge had a coach at the end of
30 I,VII| a handkerchief, when~the judge and Anselme arrived. Roguin,
31 I,VII| greetings were over and the judge told him the purpose of
32 I,VII| Cesar, Anselme, and the judge went up to the perfumer'
33 I,VII| days. When Cesar and the judge returned to the /entresol/,
34 I,VII| Ah!" exclaimed the judge, who was not decorated.~ ~"
35 I,VII| steps--"~ ~"True," said the judge.~ ~"--of Saint-Roch on the
36 I,VII| Willingly," said the judge. "If my wife is well enough
37 I,VII| Monsieur and Madame Popinot, judge of the Lower Court of the
38 I,VII| lawyer; he is to be made a~judge because of his marriage
39 I,VII| Thirion."~ ~"A provincial judge," remarked Constance.~ ~"
40 I,VII| every woman knows how to judge the superiority or the~inferiority
41 I,VII| keeping Monsieur~Popinot the judge, and Monsieur de la Billardiere.
42 I,I | the land affair with the judge," said Ragon~in Cesar's
43 I,I | a case, during which the judge should~fulfil the functions
44 I,I | definitely. Monsieur Popinot the judge said--~The receipt!--but--
45 I,I | at Cesar's request, to a judge of the~commercial courts.
46 I,I | made him a criminal,--"a judge!"~ ~"My dear Monsieur Birotteau,
47 I,I | this is Monsieur~Lebas, a judge of the commercial courts,
48 I,I | Claparon. "But you have been a judge, and you are a~clever merchant;
49 I,II | Pillerault, nor his~uncle the judge. He allowed himself but
50 I,II | credit. I was~formerly a judge of the commercial courts,
51 I,III| merchant as Popinot the judge knew how to make a criminal~
52 I,III| occasion were Popinot the judge, Pillerault,~Anselme, the
53 I,III| animated when Popinot the judge let~fall a word about Roguin'
54 I,III| According to my ideas," said the judge, "the lender ought to have~
55 I,III| remarks, which caused the~judge and Pillerault to smile,
56 I,IV | that you, an old commercial judge, should commit such~blunders?
57 I,IV | and see his nephew. This~judge, whose mind was singularly
58 I,IV | was~annoyed at finding the judge with his nephew, seemed
59 I,IV | his partner~seemed to the judge to mask some important request.
60 I,IV | when Birotteau went out the~judge followed, and saw Birotteau
61 I,IV | eyes. At this~moment the judge re-entered.~ ~"My son--ah!
62 I,V | water from a duck's back,--a~judge!~ ~"From a commercial point
63 I,V | lose my esteem," said the~judge, pressing the hand of his
64 I,VI | safe-conduct, which neither judge nor creditor ever~refuses
65 I,VI | Paris does not know, that a judge of the commercial courts
66 I,VI | allowed itself to~create. This judge may live in dread of his
67 I,VI | reward of a pure life, this~judge is a trader, bending under
68 I,VI | circumstances, when the judge usually observes that the~
69 I,VI | The agent to whom the judge delegates the first proceedings,
70 I,VI | solicitors frequently sought the judge with~the request that he
71 I,VI | Thus it happens that the~judge almost always appoints as
72 I,VI | court. There was~neither judge nor agent nor supreme court
73 I,VI | within a~hundred days the judge can echo the atrocious saying
74 I,VI | his custodian,~his /quasi/ judge,--the representative of
75 I,VI | justice where he once sat as judge; to meet affronts where
76 I,VI | chosen by agreement with the~judge and the assignees. The three
77 I,VI | Each took his seat, and the judge gave his own armchair to
78 I,VI | Birotteau took the hands of the judge and wrung them, with tears
79 I,VII| Loraux, and Popinot the judge were waiting for them,~these
80 I,VII| through adversity," said the judge.~ ~To forget is the great
81 I,VII| Joseph Lebas, Popinot the~judge, Camusot, the Abbe Loraux,
82 I,VII| Commerce, Camusot his former judge, Ragon, and Monsieur~l'Abbe
83 I,VII| sign from the presiding~judge, the /procureur-general/
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