Chapter
1 II | pass away! Poor fellow, ten years ago he was the flower
2 II | in short, at the age of ten he was nothing more nor
3 IV | not have a penny left in ten years' time,' said~Werbrust,
4 IV | their wealth after some ten years. Next, d'Aldrigger'
5 IV | knowledge. The furniture, now ten years old, could not be~
6 V | Desert into an Interlaken in ten seconds~(precisely the time
7 V | drawing-~room for a bare ten minutes; he talked without
8 V | even if she refused it for ten years, is~never married
9 V | millions of francs, he wanted~ten. He knew a way to make thirty
10 V | make thirty millions with ten, while with five~he could
11 V | of this sort; he waited ten years for an opportunity
12 V | firing up at this. "You have ten thousand~francs. You invest
13 V | francs. You invest it in ten shares of a thousand francs
14 V | thousand francs each in ten~different enterprises. You
15 VI | and children he has some ten thousand~red woolen caps
16 VI | his brains to get rid of ten million francs'~worth of
17 VI | window, and 'inquire for' ten~thousand red woolen caps.
18 VI | nominal capital amounted to ten millions; the real capital
19 VI | dividend. Twenty per cent, on ten millions! Du Tillet's interest
20 VI | Godefroid stood stock still for ten minutes.~ ~" 'Do you accept?
21 VII| Werbrust were partners for ten years,~and there was never
22 VII| s paper~at a discount of ten or twenty per cent, and
23 VII| let go Nucingen's~paper at ten per cent of loss; they set
24 VII| it were~only a matter of ten per cent of loss' added
25 VII| besought Rastignac to accept ten per cent~upon his million
26 VII| played the part of Law~for ten days; he had the prettiest
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