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Alphabetical [« »] humiliations 3 humility 3 hummed 1 hundred 63 hundreds 4 hung 14 hunger 2 | Frequency [« »] 64 years 63 done 63 escape 63 hundred 63 mademoiselle 63 passed 62 between | Émile Gaboriau The honor of the name Concordances hundred |
Chapter
1 I| flowed at Waterloo; twelve hundred thousand foreign soldiers 2 II| If I could but amass a hundred pistoles,” he thought, “ 3 II| would not refuse me.” A hundred pistoles! A thousand francs!— 4 II| Ah! if I were to live a hundred years, never should I forget 5 II| themselves, I was saving the five hundred louis which the duke, my 6 III| possessed a fortune of two hundred and fifty thousand pounds 7 III| inheritance.~ ~Then followed the “Hundred Days.” They exasperated 8 III| would make use of the twelve hundred thousand soldiers which 9 III| sense of their duty. Twelve hundred thousand bayonets have far 10 V| saw them standing about a hundred paces from him. Although 11 VI| his gun, and, with five hundred others, marched against 12 VI| there were more than two hundred idiots before the presbytery, 13 X| pitiful income of twelve hundred francs, perhaps; but, strictly 14 X| indemnity of at least one hundred thousand francs. This would, 15 X| powers!” he exclaimed; “a hundred thousand francs! how you 16 X| continued the duke; “but one hundred thousand francs! Zounds! 17 XI| him to mention— sixty, a hundred thousand francs, even more.~ ~ 18 XII| is to say—you give him a hundred thousand francs, and that 19 XIV| between seven and eight hundred thousand francs!” said one 20 XVII| an income of at least six hundred thousand francs,” said the 21 XVII| least—yes, at least fifteen hundred thousand francs as her marriage 22 XVII| otherwise. At least three hundred yards of rough ground separated 23 XXI| tells me that two or three hundred retired officers will come 24 XXI| sovereigns have left one hundred and fifty thousand soldiers 25 XXI| Before two o’clock fifteen hundred men will be gathered there 26 XXII| the number of about five hundred. Lacheneur should have been 27 XXIII| less than half an hour five hundred foot-soldiers and three 28 XXIII| foot-soldiers and three hundred of the Montaignac chasseurs 29 XXIII| thing happened. Of four hundred shots, fired into a dense 30 XXIII| a dense crowd of fifteen hundred men, only three had hit 31 XXIII| at the head of about five hundred men, cavalry and infantry, 32 XXIII| every direction.~ ~About a hundred of the bravest and most 33 XXIII| Chanlouineau came up.~ ~Of the five hundred men that composed it on 34 XXV| it had not traversed two hundred yards of the Grand Rue before 35 XXV| this,” replied Maurice. “A hundred to one he is beyond reach.”~ ~“ 36 XXV| were, at this moment, two hundred prisoners in the citadel, 37 XXV| about the door. At least a hundred persons were standing there; 38 XXVI| review.~ ~They numbered three hundred, and the duke and his companion 39 XXVII| where, among more than a hundred thousand souls, two pure 40 XXVII| ringing voice; “the three hundred prisoners in the citadel 41 XXIX| Sixty and forty are one hundred. It is necessary to procure 42 XXIX| necessary to procure one hundred feet of strong rope. It 43 XXIX| And how will you procure a hundred feet of rope at this hour 44 XXXI| gloomily; “twenty sacks with a hundred pistoles in each! Ah! if 45 XXXI| he were dead and buried a hundred feet under ground, I should 46 XXXI| miles. There were about two hundred soldiers, and they were 47 XXXI| party were not more than two hundred feet from the house in which 48 XXXIV| their dictatorship.~ ~Of the hundred or more who were confined 49 XXXIV| said, imperiously.~ ~Three hundred people were assembled there, 50 XXXVI| find a box containing three hundred and twenty-seven louis d’ 51 XXXVI| twenty-seven louis d’or and one hundred and forty-six livres.~ ~“ 52 XXXIX| income amounts to three hundred thousand francs.~ ~“Martial 53 XLIII| the house?”~ ~“More than a hundred times while Chanlouineau 54 LI| possession of about two hundred and fifty thousand francs, 55 LII| success, and by the five hundred francs which she paid in 56 LIII| they only had three or four hundred francs——~ ~Mme. Blanche 57 LIII| Mme. Blanche gave her five hundred francs.~ ~“Either her humility 58 LIII| himself.~ ~They needed three hundred francs more before they 59 LIII| realized a fortune of one hundred thousand francs in less 60 LIV| independent fortune, and he had a hundred reasons—one, by the way, 61 LIV| he trotted along about a hundred yards behind the vehicle.~ ~“ 62 LIV| tongue you shall have one hundred thousand francs.”~ ~Then, 63 LV| to-morrow, I must have two~ hundred and sixty thousand francs.~ ~“