Chapter
1 2 | o'clock in winter. From fifty to sixty Musketeers, who
2 8 | it, meaning to offer you fifty pistoles, if, against all
3 9 | good; "and one may draw fifty or sixty pistoles from this
4 9 | ascertain whether these fifty or sixty pistoles are worth
5 16| cellar. I could have drunk fifty bottles more." ~D'Artagnan
6 17| He was softened. A man of fifty cannot long bear malice
7 20| only preceded them by about fifty paces. They made all speed
8 21| immediate preparations to sail. ~Fifty vessels were waiting to
9 22| Guards, bringing with him fifty archers, who were distributed
10 23| need money?" ~"I have still fifty pistoles. That, I think,
11 25| although she is at least fifty, still gives herself jealous
12 25| wife is old and ugly?" ~"Fifty at least, monsieur, and
13 25| wrote to her to send me fifty louis or so, of which I
14 27| for my part a hundred and fifty bottles." ~"Mercy!" cried
15 27| a field of battle." ~Of fifty large sausages, suspended
16 27| How much is it worth?" ~"Fifty pistoles at most." ~"It'
17 28| horsedealer has robbed me of fifty louis, at least. Ah, you
18 28| worth at least a hundred and fifty louis, and the stingy fellow
19 28| the first place I gave you fifty." ~"You think so?" ~"PARDIEU!" ~"
20 31| vigorously that after going back fifty paces, the man ended by
21 34| amid his rags a hundred and fifty Spanish double pistoles,
22 38| left of his hundred and fifty pistoles. d'Artagnan offered
23 43| colonels, two hundred and fifty captains, twenty gentlemen
24 47| this apparition, stopped fifty paces from the bastion: "
25 63| more than a hundred and fifty paces distant. If they were
26 64| three-quarters of a league, within fifty paces of Festubert, a larger
|