Chapter
1 II | my banker calls in his capital, buys up~Government stock
2 III| wife's. Nucingen has~all my capital, and is giving me six per
3 III| cent the more upon your capital, and with that you will~
4 IV | gratitude he put the old~man's capital into his business.'~ ~" '
5 IV | swallow~down his old master's capital, and then to disgorge it.'~ ~" '
6 IV | he had realized all his capital.~ ~"When you have been one
7 IV | Bonapartist circles. His capital he handed over to Nucingen,
8 IV | the Alps dipped into her capital as though it were inexhaustible.~ ~"
9 V | speculations, investing a little capital now and again for~the sake
10 V | understood later, to wit, that capital is a power only when you~
11 V | possessed about~six millions of capital altogether. Among those
12 V | joint-stock enterprise with~capital sufficient to pay very high
13 V | in days when noodles with capital were plentiful, the~plan
14 VI | speaking now of foreign capital lost to France," continued~
15 VI | into detail. The~nominal capital amounted to ten millions;
16 VI | to ten millions; the real capital to seven.~Three millions
17 VI | instruct him to invest all your capital in shares.'~Rastignac suggested
18 VII| suspension. He~has put all his capital into Mexican securities,
19 VII| take in exchange for their capital; and with no~action on the
20 VII| three per cent on their capital,~they sang Nucingen's praises,
21 VII| on too large a scale, the capital was locked up, the concern~
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