Chapter
1 III | he lived was occupied by twenty families—families of workingmen—
2 III | take a seat?”~Duroy waited twenty minutes, then he turned
3 V | had known one another for twenty years. A ring caused them
4 V | child upon his knee. At twenty minutes of three he rose
5 V | petty debts ranging from twenty francs to one hundred sous.~
6 V | shall lunch upon Clotilde’s twenty francs; that will not hinder
7 V | continued to draw upon the twenty francs until only four francs
8 V | francs until only four francs twenty remained. He decided to
9 VI | the gentleman! If you want twenty francs you can have them,
10 VIII| I see—eight—ten—fifteen—twenty—or perhaps thirty—no more.
11 XI | were paid, two hundred and twenty francs remained for the
12 XI | Bah! I shall be absent twenty minutes. No one will even
13 XII | not know; I think it is twenty or twenty-five years. It
14 XIII| it, you have told me that twenty times; but you have had
15 XIII| stock; instead, I will take twenty thousand and you can have
16 XV | being one of them, had made twenty millions.~As for Walter,
17 XV | inherited some money.”~“Barely twenty thousand livres a year.
18 XV | two girls who will have twenty or thirty millions each,
|