Book, Chapter
1 I, XVIII| products in most general demand—coffee, sugar, rice, tobacco, cotton
2 I, XIX | chests of tea, bags of coffee, hogsheads of tobacco, pipes
3 II, II | gravity.~“Then get me my coffee, and be quick about it.”~
4 II, II | importance. “But let me have my coffee,” he added impatiently; “
5 II, II | collect my thoughts without my coffee.”~Fortunately, Ben Zoof
6 II, IV | he was well provided with coffee, he cared little for luxuries,
7 II, IX | and that their stock of coffee, sugar, and tobacco would
8 II, IX | business, “we want some coffee, some tobacco, and other
9 II, IX | the Jew.~“To-day we want coffee, and we want sugar, and
10 II, IX | process with the sugar and coffee: for every kilogramme he
11 II, XIV | failed him was his stock of coffee, and as coffee was a beverage
12 II, XIV | stock of coffee, and as coffee was a beverage without which
13 II, XIV | let him have a pound of coffee.~The orderly shook his head
14 II, XIV | head dubiously.~“A pound of coffee, old Nathan? I can’t say.”~“
15 II, XIV | you parted with all your coffee?” he asked, in a sympathizing
16 II, XIV | I cannot live without my coffee.”~“Of course you cannot,”
17 II, XIV | doubt.”~“Oh, I must have coffee,” said the Jew again.~“Certainly,”
18 II, XIV | the professor assented. “Coffee is nutritious; it warms
19 II, XIV | Shall you weigh me the coffee with my steelyard?” he asked,
20 II, XIV | the hook, and upon this coffee was thrown until the needle
21 II, XIV | it took seven pounds of coffee to do this.~“There you are!
22 II, XIV | There you are! There’s your coffee, man!” Ben Zoof said.~“Are
23 II, XV | which he might boil his coffee, he was perfectly sure he
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