Chapter

 1       II|        replied, “and you shall judge. You shall decide. When
 2       II|       acts which God alone can judge, since God alone can read
 3       XI|    right you make yourself the judge of Monsieur Lacheneur’s
 4    XVIII|      in the solemn face of the judge.~ ~He had need of all his
 5       XX|        marquis, made presiding judge of the court at Montaignac,
 6     XXVI|      participant, witness, and judge.~ ~The other members of
 7    XXVII|       proof?” demanded another judge, upon whom the duke looked
 8    XXVII|        before the God who will judge all men, Monsieur de Sairmeuse,
 9    XXVII|     abbe knew that this wicked judge had some terrible weapon
10  XXXVIII|    back to him.~ ~Now he could judge of his conduct calmly.~ ~
11        L| complicity, dragged before the judge, and even accused of being
12      LII|   Sairmeuse,” he continued, “I judge that everybody believes
13     LIII|      magistracy, and was now a judge in the tribunal of the Seine;
14       LV|   himself for the visit of the judge of instruction, when Maurice
15       LV|      that struggle between the judge and Lecoq on one side, and
16       LV|     contrary,” interrupted the judge, “they will allow you the
17       LV|    timidly.~ ~“At once.”~ ~The judge had already turned toward
18       LV|        Very well!” replied the judge.~ ~When he left the office
19       LV|    that on transmitting to the judge the confession written by
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