Part, Chapter
1 I,I | as they did in~1793. The Funds are at sixty-two: buy into
2 I,I | sixty-two: buy into the Funds. You will get ten~thousand
3 I,I | Wait for a rise in the Funds, and you can~give eight
4 I,II | which he~bought into the Funds at thirty, paying for the
5 I,II | francs a year from the public Funds, hesitated. His~ambition
6 I,III| passion to take from the funds~entrusted to him by his
7 I,III| Sarah's banker, and having funds to invest.~The Norman nature
8 I,III| drawn from him his last funds.~The assignees of the failure
9 I,III| half their value with the funds of Roguin and the assets
10 I,III| partner, and supply the funds to start with. After~the
11 I,V | put his savings into the Funds; he had suffered, like~others,
12 I,V | he placed in the public Funds, and from which~he derived
13 I,V | get a set-back, why the Funds are at eighty, and I~could
14 I,V | Roguin will carry off our funds?" said Pillerault, laughing.~"
15 I,VI | francs~from his current funds, and notes for one hundred
16 I,I | speculation, but happily all his~funds were tied up in an affair
17 I,II | thousand francs out of the Funds.~ ~"Well, my poor nephew,
18 I,II | bear upon a~man into whose funds so many nascent industries
19 I,III| need. Unhappily, my~own funds are tied up for a few days;
20 I,III| Roguin made away with the funds of his client, and thus~
21 I,IV | gave orders to buy into the~Funds to the amount of thirty
22 I,IV | to deal with when he has funds to invest; and he has some~
23 I,V | interests;~I shall sell out my Funds and live on dry bread; Popinot
24 I,VI | latter made the most of these funds by~negotiations at the Bourse.
25 I,VII| Paris who carried off the funds which~Birotteau had deposited
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