Part,  Chapter

 1     I,     III|       more than your goats are worth. Now run! How far is it?"~ ~"
 2     I,      VI|       wealth I have won is not worth the price I paid for it;
 3     I,    VIII|    honesty, who don't think it worth your while to cajole an
 4     I,      IX|    crooked, and broken, hardly worth the mentioning. Of horses
 5     I,      XI|        the man whom he thought worth catching was clever indeed
 6     I,      XI|   described as a wooden chest, worth three florins; precious
 7     I,      XI|    Here you can see the actual worth of my uncle's museum."~ ~"
 8     I,      XI|     something that is actually worth two hundred thousand florins
 9     I,      XI| laughed. "The pipes are hardly worth more, but the stems would
10     I,      XI|        the stems would be well worth the money, for they and
11    II,       I|   thousand florins. Yet it was worth its cost, for, before its
12    II,     III|     therapeutic, etc., was not worth the sand strewn over the
13    II,      IV|       you do not know your own worth!"~ ~At that moment the jasmine-bush
14    II,      IV|       the girls have is hardly worth mentioning. Now listen.
15    II,    XIII|         I said, bitterly, "not worth plastering." I took from
16    II,     XVI|         and I did not think it worth my while to undeceive him.
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