Part, Chapter
1 I,I | bring in a~thousand crowns a year, with a house which we both
2 I,I | live eight months of~the year at Chinon, than to begin
3 I,I | eight thousand francs a year to your daughter and we
4 I,I | eight thousand francs a year, is nothing at all~towards
5 I,I | fifteen thousand~francs a year. Hein! If I could make you
6 I,I | under strong pressure. In a~year, according to my calculations,
7 I,I | three thousand francs a year; and at the price things
8 I,I | fifty thousand francs a year and spend sixty thousand,
9 I,II | the terrible levy of the year II. made a clean sweep in
10 I,II | Towards~the end of this year his integrity won him a
11 I,II | age~of a thousand francs a year from the public Funds, hesitated.
12 I,II | make a thousand crowns a year,~and where he would lead
13 I,II | young Tourangian. In the year 1800,~and in the pretty
14 I,II | anxieties.~ ~During the first year Cesar instructed his wife
15 I,II | customers. At the close of that~year the assets staggered our
16 I,II | twenty thousand francs a year, and the education of~Cesarine,
17 I,II | The first days of the year 1814, so fatal to imperial
18 I,II | and long skirts. Up to the year 1819 he kept up~the habit
19 I,III| twelve hundred francs a year~with us. If I were not grateful
20 I,III| thirty thousand francs a year instead of~fifty thousand,--
21 I,IV | in the fine season of the year.~ ~Birotteau found this
22 I,IV | perhaps a hundred thousand a year."~ ~"But just look how fine
23 I,V | some odd hundred francs a~year; next of forty thousand
24 I,V | hundred thousand francs a year, he had~made about seven
25 I,V | Fifteen hundred francs a year sufficed~for all his personal
26 I,V | gave a dinner~four times a year to his friends, at Roland'
27 I,V | twelve hundred francs a~year, in the Rue des Cinq-Diamants."~ ~"
28 I,VI | hundred thousand francs this year, for we'll pour on every
29 I,VI | itself a dozen bottles a year,--eighteen francs; say eighteen~
30 I,I | because it was the end of the year," he whispered~to Cesar; "
31 I,I | three thousand francs a year, that would give him at
32 I,III| lighten all my fears--~in a year I shall be so prosperous
33 I,III| have given you a sad~New Year's gift!"~ ~The two women,
34 I,IV | first three days of the year, two hundred visiting cards~
35 I,IV | vain. The opening of the year with all its festivities~
36 I,V | the beginning of the new year were~manufactured, in the
37 I,V | nearly ten thousand francs a year. In ten years you can pay
38 I,V | fifteen hundred francs a year from me~for their expenses,
39 I,V | three thousand francs a year, her board, and his own
40 I,VI | declares that as he has~paid a year in advance, and having only
41 I,VI | and having only one more year to"--here~Pillerault gave
42 I,VI | strict attention~--"and, the year being paid for, that he
43 I,VI | something for repairs before the year is out."~ ~"But," said Pillerault, "
44 I,VII| pressing creditors. Next year, we may do as well. With
45 I,VII| At the beginning of the year 1822, the Canal Saint-Martin
46 I,VII| three thousand francs a year to get other buildings.
47 I,VII| three thousand francs a year," said du Tillet.~ ~"Three--
48 I,VII| anticipating our profits of next year,~the necessary sum to make
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