JUDGE in Classic Quotes
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Quotes from The Trial by Franz Kafka
Search Quotes from Classic Book Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen |
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Current Search - Judge in The Trial
1 "Now then," said the judge, thumbing through the book.
2 "Those are the official notes of the examining judge," he said, and let the notebook fall down onto the desk.
3 The judge, however, paid no attention to that but sat very comfortably on his chair and, after saying a few words to close his discussion with the man behind him, reached for a little note book, the only item on his desk.
4 He stood pressed closely against the table, the press of the crowd behind him was so great that he had to press back against it if he did not want to push the judge's desk down off the podium and perhaps the judge along with it.
5 There's nothing stupid about what you've said, Mrs. Grubach, or at least I partly agree with you, only, the way I judge the whole thing is harsher than yours, and think it's not only not something complicated but simply a fuss about nothing.
6 The judge had become quite cross but seemed to have no power over those below him in the hall, he tried to reduce what harm had been done in the gallery and jumped up threatening them, his eyebrows, until then hardly remarkable, pushed themselves up and became big, black and bushy over his eyes.
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