Part, Chapter
1 I,I | your sign, which cost six hundred francs, and~renounce 'The
2 I,I | these days. We have one hundred good thousand~francs invested
3 I,I | will be satisfied with a hundred thousand francs~/dot/?--
4 I,I | as you say. Well, then, a hundred thousand~francs, or even
5 I,I | as a snail, won't~sell a hundred thousand francs worth of
6 I,I | practice is worth four or five hundred thousand.~If Crottat does
7 I,I | Cesarine must have two hundred thousand francs /dot/; and
8 I,I | shares. I furnish three~hundred thousand francs,--that is,
9 I,I | will you get your three hundred thousand francs?" said Madame~
10 I,I | little cat. I shall take~the hundred thousand francs which are
11 I,I | here in hand,--in all, one hundred and sixty thousand. There
12 I,I | thousand. There remain~one hundred and forty thousand more,
13 I,I | So there are the three hundred thousand francs~provided
14 I,I | calculations, I shall have made a hundred~thousand francs at least.
15 I,I | discoveries have made the hundred and sixty thousand francs
16 I,I | must be~fools to sell for a hundred sous what is worth a hundred
17 I,I | hundred sous what is worth a hundred francs. If~you met a child
18 I,II | possessing already~six hundred francs, now had a chamber
19 I,II | Cesar, who possessed a hundred louis d'or,~changed them
20 I,II | together an~income of fifteen hundred francs, or whenever the
21 I,II | a~modest capital of one hundred thousand francs, which was
22 I,II | the~temperaments. The five hundred perfumers of France, allured
23 I,II | Birotteau more than three hundred~gross of the Paste and the
24 I,II | fact he possessed~only a hundred thousand francs over and
25 I,II | dismissed him. During the Hundred Days~Birotteau was the bugbear
26 I,III| Vandenesse who spends twelve hundred francs a year~with us. If
27 I,III| obtaining a rich wife with five hundred thousand francs of~her own,
28 I,III| time the notary had given a hundred thousand francs of~the remaining
29 I,III| Madame Roguin was worth two hundred thousand francs,~du Tillet
30 I,III| francs,~du Tillet three hundred thousand, and the notary
31 I,III| Lupeaulx to Germany~during the Hundred Days, and came back at the
32 I,III| about the Madeleine. The~hundred thousand francs belonging
33 I,III| seizing his hand. "Take the hundred thousand~francs which were
34 I,III| lettering. It cost fifteen~hundred francs, my boy. To-day,
35 I,IV | quarter?--more than two hundred francs a month perhaps!
36 I,IV | rent ought to be fifteen~hundred francs. At that price I
37 I,IV | will at once pay me five hundred francs as an indemnity~towards
38 I,IV | You must pay me seven hundred and fifty~francs, /hic et
39 I,IV | it included in~the five hundred francs. Monsieur, you will
40 I,IV | fellow, twenty-five francs a hundred, if you take them~all."~ ~"
41 I,IV | cried Birotteau. "Fifteen hundred francs! I~shall want perhaps
42 I,IV | I~shall want perhaps a hundred thousand a year."~ ~"But
43 I,IV | are to be weighed by the hundred~pounds, so that there may
44 I,V | five thousand and some odd hundred francs a~year; next of forty
45 I,V | business which amounted to a hundred thousand francs a year,
46 I,V | lost the young man, two hundred friends followed the body
47 I,V | friend Matifat. Fifteen hundred francs a year sufficed~for
48 I,V | getting rich to put three hundred thousand~francs into it.
49 I,V | the Bank of France for a~hundred thousand francs for the
50 I,V | store-rooms,--all for twelve hundred francs a~year, in the Rue
51 I,V | you have gone in debt two hundred thousand francs."~ ~"That
52 I,V | shall I ever pay that two hundred~thousand francs?" said Cesar,
53 I,VI | against the Bourbons after~the Hundred Days. Gaudissart, to whom
54 I,VI | the fore! We shall make~a hundred thousand francs this year,
55 I,VI | eighteen~thousand heads,--one hundred and eighty thousand francs.
56 I,VI | funds, and notes for one hundred and forty thousand~francs
57 I,VI | get the equivalent of the hundred and forty~thousand francs
58 I,VI | transformations which take place in a~hundred comrades, when ten years
59 I,VI | forty Academicians."~ ~"Of a hundred Academicians," said Popinot,
60 I,VI | must manage forty on every hundred~remitted, and I'll answer
61 I,VI | remitted, and I'll answer for a hundred thousand bottles in six~
62 I,VII| Birotteau is going to spend a hundred thousand francs~on his ball,
63 I,VII| house-painter. She has three hundred thousand francs /dot/. I
64 I,VII| you. If you will pay me a hundred~thousand francs down for
65 I,VII| opened her eyes.~ ~"One hundred and nine, with the clerks."~ ~"
66 I,VII| all her little~hoard, a hundred louis, on buying books for
67 I,VII| the rooms.~ ~"It takes a hundred and twenty wax-candles,"
68 I,VII| Braschon.~ ~"A bill of two hundred francs at Trudon's," said
69 I,VII| Grindot. "We shall receive a hundred and more persons~to-morrow
70 I,VII| than if you had built a hundred houses."~ ~Constance, much
71 I,VII| cried Cesar. "I'd give a hundred francs if someone~would
72 I,VII| hackney-coaches remained, out of~the hundred or more which had crowded
73 I,I | Company, the repayment of the hundred and~sixty thousand francs
74 I,I | himself up.~"Out of every hundred merchants there are more
75 I,I | Has Roguin given~your four hundred thousand francs to Monsieur
76 I,I | was to give~him--my two hundred and forty thousand francs.
77 I,I | question? To know if your two hundred and forty thousand~francs
78 I,I | paid~over, to my care, one hundred thousand francs. I gave
79 I,I | squandered it, together with your hundred thousand francs,~which he
80 I,I | long ago,--and your last hundred thousand as well,~for I
81 I,I | only red~flames.~ ~"Your hundred thousand francs in his hands,
82 I,I | francs in his hands, my hundred thousand for~his practice,
83 I,I | thousand for~his practice, a hundred thousand from Claparon,--
84 I,I | Claparon,--there's three hundred~thousand francs purloined,
85 I,I | bought the practice for~three hundred thousand francs,--I, who
86 I,I | good~thing!--and paid a hundred thousand down. I have no
87 I,I | I say a word about that~hundred thousand francs, and when
88 I,I | My ball--my cross--two hundred thousand francs in paper
89 I,I | end of twenty~years one hundred thousand francs. In the
90 I,I | Roguin has carried~off a hundred thousand francs of mine;
91 I,I | the~property costs me five hundred thousand francs instead
92 I,I | thousand francs instead of four hundred~thousand. Roguin has also
93 I,I | has also carried off two hundred and forty thousand~francs
94 I,I | won't speak now of the two hundred and forty thousand~francs,--
95 I,I | Birotteau a receipt for his four~hundred thousand francs," said Claparon. "
96 I,I | for I had given Roguin a hundred thousand myself the day
97 I,I | after it. If he sends me my hundred thousand francs,~and two
98 I,I | thousand francs,~and two hundred thousand more for his half
99 I,I | off, as they say, three hundred thousand~francs, he will
100 I,I | to make a payment of two hundred thousand francs to the~sellers.
101 I,I | He had given~Claparon a hundred thousand francs to pay over
102 I,I | that Roguin had cost him~a hundred thousand francs. Du Tillet
103 I,I | liabilities~amount to two hundred and thirty-five thousand
104 I,I | cost of the ball, and a hundred and~seventy-five thousand
105 I,I | assets, say perhaps one hundred thousand~francs; and I can
106 I,I | the money,--in all, one hundred and~forty thousand. All
107 I,I | All depends on making a hundred thousand francs out of~Cephalic
108 I,II | With five thousand six hundred francs income, I could set~
109 I,II | warranty, as you~will for your hundred thousand francs. I will
110 I,II | sending Celestin three hundred~bottles of oil?"~ ~"No,"
111 I,II | had promised Finot five hundred francs for every puff in
112 I,II | were ten of them; three~hundred francs for every second-rate
113 I,II | continued Cesar, "a credit of a hundred thousand francs,~secured
114 I,III| price of the land?"~ ~"One hundred and forty thousand francs."~ ~"
115 I,III| sentiment. If you had paid two hundred~thousand francs, supposing
116 I,III| that there were another one hundred~thousand paid down in advance
117 I,III| have had the security of a hundred thousand francs, to warrant
118 I,III| giving you a credit of one hundred thousand. The result might
119 I,III| losing more than one or two hundred thousand~francs through
120 I,III| sold his oil?"~ ~"The three hundred bottles he sent us are all
121 I,III| copies of the prospectus. One hundred~thousand bottles bought.
122 I,III| are ruined."~ ~"He had two hundred thousand francs of mine,"
123 I,IV | three days of the year, two hundred visiting cards~were sent
124 I,IV | of its master, in half a hundred libertine curls. The chief
125 I,IV | shout and clamor,--'One hundred thousand francs for~five
126 I,IV | sous! or five sous for a hundred thousand francs! gold mines!~
127 I,IV | Renew a note for twelve hundred francs?" said Molineux,
128 I,IV | If you have not twelve~hundred francs to pay me on the
129 I,IV | pay down at least three hundred thousand francs before~you
130 I,IV | Your liabilities are five hundred~thousand. To meet them you
131 I,V | to renew a note of~twelve hundred francs!--your ball, given
132 I,V | life, I can return the~four hundred francs Madame de Listomere
133 I,V | considered.~Suppose that your hundred thousand francs deposited
134 I,V | than you have them now. The hundred and forty thousand francs
135 I,V | eventually~died, worth eighteen hundred thousand francs, on a third
136 I,V | years you can pay off a~hundred thousand francs, for you
137 I,V | women will have fifteen hundred francs a year from me~for
138 I,V | he might have lost his hundred~thousand francs with Roguin,
139 I,V | salary of two thousand five hundred francs,--all the functions
140 I,VI | agent would be found~nine hundred and fifty times on the side
141 I,VI | copper will bring about three hundred~thousand francs. We shall
142 I,VI | might have~left us only one hundred thousand, we hereby declare
143 I,VI | such rapidity that within a~hundred days the judge can echo
144 I,VI | amounted to not more than one hundred and a few thousand~francs.
145 I,VI | when liquidated came to~one hundred and ninety-five thousand
146 I,VI | Cesar's creditors was two hundred and fifty-five thousand~
147 I,VI | The debts amounted to four hundred and forty thousand;~consequently,
148 I,VII| is going to make three~hundred thousand francs out of /
149 I,VII| Cephalic Oil mount up to two hundred~and forty-two thousand francs;
150 I,VII| francs; half of that is one hundred and twenty-~one thousand,"
151 I,VII| the lease, gives~/you/ one hundred and thirty-three thousand
152 I,VII| s hands, and we have one hundred and sixty-one thousand~francs.
153 I,VII| share in this~business for a hundred thousand francs, and that
154 I,VII| he gave a fine ball~--two hundred carriages in the street."~ ~"
155 I,VII| remorse; for out of every hundred~persons walking about that
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