Part,  Chapter

 1     I,     VII|        should not we offer "1,000 florins for a vote?"~ ~Somebody
 2     I,     VII|           to his family the 1,000 florins which we were willing to
 3     I,     VII| understand that the bill of 1,000 florins which he saw would be given
 4     I,    VIII|        give you thir - no, twenty florins!" But he never said whether
 5     I,    VIII|         said whether these twenty florins were meant to be given monthly,
 6     I,    VIII|         DEAR UNCLE, - One hundred florins will not induce me to leave
 7     I,      IX|        would not have fetched ten florins at auction. Of silver there
 8     I,      XI|           as a bait. One thousand florins, paid down, protected a
 9     I,      XI|          hundred and seventy-nine florins and forty-five kreutzers.
10     I,      XI|         wooden chest, worth three florins; precious old majolica as
11     I,      XI|        worth two hundred thousand florins appraised at three hundred,
12     I,      XI|         that on the three hundred florins the amount of tax would
13     I,      XI|         of tax would be seventeen florins, and on the two hundred
14     I,      XI|         have to pay nine thousand florins as legacy taxes?"~ ~"Is
15     I,      XI|         is valued at twenty-three florins. Do you think that underestimated?
16     I,      XI|         ten bills of one thousand florins apiece, two hundred bills
17     I,      XI|      hundred bills of one hundred florins, and sixty-four fifty-florin
18     I,      XI|      Something over four thousand florins," I replied.~ ~"That is
19     I,      XI|          at least twenty thousand florins, and these you have fooled
20     I,      XI|         you these twenty thousand florins." I was surprised at the
21     I,      XI|        bank-notes of one thousand florins each. I wanted to give him
22     I,      XI|          Good for twenty thousand florins, which I will pay upon receipt
23    II,       I|        hundred and fifty thousand florins. Yet it was worth its cost,
24    II,       I|        about twenty-five thousand florins for damage done by their
25    II,      IV|            too, she has a million florins from her grandfather, and
26    II,      IV|          amount of sixty thousand florins, so she is not over-willing
27    II,       V|    because - he wants the million florins of her grandfather's which
28    II,      VI|  informing me that the million of florins was her money, and not Cenni'
29    II,     VII|           pay the twenty thousand florins Siegfried had lent me when
30    II,     VII|      brand-new and shining silver florins, while the boy received
31    II,     VII|           lend me twenty thousand florins. Here, pray, let me hand
32    II,      IX|          consists of a million of florins in good bonds."~ ~I bowed
33    II,       X|         to exactly one million of florins."~ ~"I am quite convinced,"
34    II,       X|          and twenty-five thousand florins.~ ~"How is that possible?"
35    II,       X|           we have thirty thousand florins less than the million.~ ~"
36    II,       X|          amount of one million of florins, and authorising him to
37    II,      XI|          and twenty-five thousand florins par - and asked him for
38    II,    XVII|          income on her million of florins would amount, at the utmost,
Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (VA2) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2010. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License