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1 I | preliminary payment of~two thousand francs. To satisfy this
2 I | alas!~be made.~ ~Now, a thousand francs were lacking to Pierrotin,
3 I | danger of his losing his two thousand francs~already paid to the
4 I | francs, instead of the two~thousand five hundred still due,
5 I | already spent two hundred~thousand francs upon it?"~ ~"If you
6 I | Pierrotin, thinking of~the thousand francs he wanted to get
7 I | Moreau wasn't worth three thousand francs when~Monsieur le
8 II | Moreau a salary of three thousand francs and his residence
9 II | accepted a sum of twenty-~five thousand francs from a wood-merchant
10 II | legitimate possessor of sixty thousand francs~in savings, if he
11 II | hundred and twenty-five thousand francs in Champagne, a township
12 II | returned a revenue of seventy~thousand francs net. It was a saying
13 II | worth one hundred and~twenty thousand francs of capital invested
14 II | hidden one hundred and twenty thousand francs, and his farm at~
15 II | about two hundred and eighty thousand francs, giving him an income
16 II | an income of~some sixteen thousand.~ ~Such was the position
17 II | he himself pocketed~forty thousand francs which Leger offered
18 II | night, "if I make fifty thousand francs out of the Moulineaux~
19 II | the count will give me ten~thousand as a fee,--we'll retire
20 II | let us have it for thirty thousand francs."~ ~"We shall be
21 II | mill of Mours for a hundred thousand francs. That~would give
22 II | That~would give us ten thousand a year in rentals. Nogent
23 II | still have an~income of ten thousand from the Grand-Livre."~ ~"
24 II | to get an extra hundred~thousand francs out of you, which
25 II | of two hundred and fifty thousand francs~out of his place;
26 III | are five-franc~pieces in a thousand francs. So that the "Very
27 III | Pierrotin by the~arm.~ ~"Oh, my thousand francs!" thought Pierrotin
28 IV | had offered me a hundred~thousand francs a year, perhaps--
29 IV | The pacha did give me a~thousand talari as a present."~ ~"
30 IV | presents,--diamonds,~ten thousand talari, one thousand gold
31 IV | ten thousand talari, one thousand gold coins, a beautiful
32 IV | truth, all the rest, the ten thousand talari, the thousand gold~
33 IV | ten thousand talari, the thousand gold~pieces, and the fine
34 IV | made him give back two thousand of~the talari, and, consequently,
35 IV | paid you, as it did, thirty thousand francs for each of~those
36 IV | certainly to pay you~twenty thousand. Whereas, if you go to this
37 IV | decorator, you will not get two thousand."~ ~"The money is not the
38 IV | have paid an advance of~two thousand francs? Well, those dogs
39 IV | to whom I~have to pay two thousand five hundred francs more,
40 IV | down, and my note for a thousand for two months! Those~vultures
41 IV | night that miserable last thousand! Hue, Bichette!~They won'
42 IV | Zena, paid three hundred thousand~francs to her father and
43 V | If you should want twenty~thousand francs or so, I'll lend
44 V | in a low voice. "Forty thousand~of his pictures on coin
45 V | for two hundred and sixty thousand, money down,~before Monsieur
46 V | three hundred and sixty~thousand, instead of letting me cut
47 V | Moulineaux brings in to-day six thousand francs in rental.~I'll take
48 V | another lease of it at seven thousand five hundred for~eighteen
49 V | the count gives him ten thousand francs for the transaction~
50 V | matter will bring him fifty thousand,--and well-earned, too."~ ~"
51 V | should he spend two hundred thousand francs in restoring the~
52 V | on your return trip, the thousand francs you need to pay for~
53 V | has lately promised thirty thousand francs to a celebrated~Scotch
54 V | deposit with the concierge the thousand and one utensils belonging~
55 V | morrow he~would have his thousand francs, and, as a consequence,
56 VI | and we hunt over twelve thousand acres of forest, not~counting
57 VI | of his MEANS, she was a thousand~leagues from dreaming that
58 VI | made two hundred and fifty~thousand francs out of your situation
59 VI | now be worth five hundred thousand francs instead~of half that
60 VII | about two hundred and fifty thousand~francs, I want to raise
61 VII | where could I get the three thousand francs~board-money which
62 VII | notary, cost him~four hundred thousand francs; and he has just
63 VII | wife with three hundred thousand francs, which~gave him an
64 VII | him an income of thirty thousand francs a year. He then divided~
65 VII | three shares of four hundred thousand francs each,~which he gave
66 VII | could spend his thirty thousand a year as he pleased, without
67 VII | garden, for the sum of a thousand~francs a year. He troubled
68 VII | all~not more than three thousand francs a year there; for
69 VII | alone knew of the thirty thousand a year annuity. But Camusot
70 VIII| second clerk. He gets a thousand francs a year from me, and
71 VIII| the amount of some twelve~thousand francs a year by the death
72 IX | was a widower) eighteen thousand francs a year, and with
73 IX | year, and with the~twelve thousand which an uncle has just
74 IX | has an~income of thirty thousand. So he pays his debts, and
75 IX | Cardot had laid by~eighty thousand francs. The old gentleman,
76 IX | spent the sum of forty-five thousand francs~in fitting up for
77 IX | meant to leave her a hundred thousand francs.~The iron age had
78 IX | Georges Marest, with thirty thousand francs a year, and a handsome~
79 IX | his~patrimony of eighteen thousand francs a year, his intention
80 IX | throws produced a~gain of two thousand francs. Oscar then thought
81 IX | two throws carried off the thousand francs of their mutual~stake.
82 IX | you are; I'll get you a~thousand francs and you can win back
83 IX | Georges is!"~ ~He received the thousand francs from Florentine and
84 IX | running. After losing the~thousand francs Oscar was seized
85 IX | himself; so I lent him a thousand francs, but those brigands~
86 X | lost it, and I lend him a thousand francs to win it back,~and
87 X | you can. I'll return the~thousand francs which you borrowed
88 XI | in~possession of thirty thousand francs a year!"~ ~"Has Monsieur
89 XI | did you lose your thirty thousand a year?" asked Oscar.~ ~"
90 XI | to one hundred and fifty thousand francs, and he~married the
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