Book, Chapter
1 I, II | 19th, 18—.~Property: 1200 francs in rentes.~Length of service:
2 II, VI | asked for some thousand francs: “A steelyard?”~“Yes!” echoed
3 II, VI | worth? If it is worth twenty francs, I will leave a deposit
4 II, VI | You shall have twenty francs,” said Servadac.~“Oh, it
5 II, VI | in gold money a hundred francs, and twenty francs for the
6 II, VI | hundred francs, and twenty francs for the hire.” The old man
7 II, VI | of one hundred and twenty francs was handed over to the Jew,
8 II, VI | Rosette, surlily.~“Two hundred francs!” whined Hakkabut.~“Silence!”
9 II, VI | Two hundred and thirty francs, is it not?”~“I dare say
10 II, VI | over two hundred and thirty francs in silver money, or we will
11 II, VI | Very scarce, you know. Ten francs a day, I think, would not
12 II, VII | coins representing five francs, two francs, and fifty centimes
13 II, VII | representing five francs, two francs, and fifty centimes measure
14 II, VII | about 246,000 trillions of francs.”~“It would make gold about
15 II, IX | kilogrammes of tobacco at twelve francs a kilogramme: a hundred
16 II, IX | kilogramme: a hundred and twenty francs,” said the Jew.~Ben Zoof
17 II, XIII| the round sum of 150,000 francs, half of which was in sterling
18 II, XIV | that we paid for it. Ten francs a pound, you know.”~The
19 II, XVII| compelled to pay 50,000 francs for a balloon-ticket, or
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