The Trial by Franz Kafka Chapter 6 Page 35

court's circles?” asked K. “Yes,” said the lawyer. “You're asking questions like a child,” said K.'s uncle. “What circles should I move in, then, if not with members of my own discipline?” the lawyer added. It sounded so indisputable that K. gave no answer at all. “But you work in the High Court, not that court in the attic,” he had wanted to say but could not bring himself to actually utter it. “You have to realise,” the lawyer continued, in a tone as if he were explaining something obvious, unnecessary and incidental, “you have to realise that I also derive great advantage for my clients from mixing with those people, and do so in many different ways, it's not something you can keep talking about all the time.

I'm at a bit of a disadvantage now, of