Chapter
1 II | himself issued at twenty per cent more~than he gave for them!
2 III| and is giving me six per cent; do likewise, you will~have
3 III| likewise, you will~have one per cent the more upon your capital,
4 IV | who~gave him eight per cent upon it, and took over the
5 IV | Government at a mere sixty per cent of reduction; wherefore~
6 VI | sham~dividend. Twenty per cent, on ten millions! Du Tillet'
7 VII| have gone up twenty per cent already; they will go up~
8 VII| discount of ten or twenty per cent, and we shall make a handsome~
9 VII| paper myself at~twenty per cent discount.'~ ~"The news spread
10 VII| Nucingen's~paper at ten per cent of loss; they set the example
11 VII| a discount of twenty~per cent, and Martin Falleix with
12 VII| commission of~two or three per cent out of Werbrust.~ ~"In a
13 VII| something like~fifty per cent for your account with Nucingen.'~ ~" '
14 VII| paid less than fifty per cent. Ah, if it were~only a matter
15 VII| only a matter of ten per cent of loss' added the retired
16 VII| somebody was~offering one per cent for Nucingen's paper! 'There
17 VII| Rastignac to accept ten per cent~upon his million if he would
18 VII| They had another three per cent on their capital,~they sang
19 VII| brings~in a dividend of cent per cent.~ ~"Rastignac and
20 VII| in a dividend of cent per cent.~ ~"Rastignac and Mme. de
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