Part, Chapter
1 I,I | competing in the election of judges for the department of~commerce;
2 I,II | genius. The public always~judges by results. Birotteau passed
3 I,II | highly esteemed among the judges.~His defects contributed
4 I,VI | the affair of~Saint-Roch, judges in the department of commerce,
5 I,I | a court of irremovable judges,~with a magistracy to attend
6 I,I | for we were both elected judges at the same time,--not to~
7 I,II | said the lawyer, "the judges of the commercial courts
8 I,II | commercial courts and the~judges of the civil courts are
9 I,II | courts are different sorts of judges. You dash~through things.
10 I,III| more plain than this~the judges stand six against six."~ ~"
11 I,IV | clock, the hour at which the judges left their~court-rooms.
12 I,VI | be nobly magnified if the judges had time~to attend to it.
13 I,VI | some years past the best judges have sought the advice of
14 I,VI | complain of the extortion, the judges~had some hope of reforming
15 I,VI | rascally methods, which~the judges will condemn as judges,
16 I,VI | the judges will condemn as judges, but by which they will
17 I,VI | existence,~prove it to the judges, sue for justice, go and
18 I,VI | saying with a bow to the judges, "Excuse me, you are mistaken,~
19 I,VI | sittings, and~where the judges, having current accounts
20 I,VI | you are now free. All the judges of this court, dear~Monsieur
21 I,VII| nailed there, gazing at the judges with a~wondering air, as
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