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 mentionsixty, 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 oclock 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.~ ~“
Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (VA2) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2010. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License