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Updated: June 24, 2025


"Then I'll get ye lots of books," replied Tess, "an' ye'd best always keep hid less'n I let ye down, 'cause Sandy might catch onto yer bein' here. Waldstricker's money'll set loose a lot of sneaks like him lookin' fer ye!"

They're worth fifty pounds apiece at the very lowest, and they're yours, my lad, to do what you like with." Captain Kettle lay back on his pillow and smiled complacently. "That money'll just set up my Missis nicely in a lodging-house. Now I can go on with my work here, and know that whatever happens she and the kids are provided for."

They would like to take it all with them. "We must go through it again and have no nonsense," said Lars Peter. "We can't take the whole bag of tricks with us. Money'll be needed too and not so little either." So they went over the things again one by one. Klavs was out of the question. It would be a shame to send him to strangers in his old age; they could feed him on the downs.

"Look at Helen's spiffy suit!" "Oh, money, money, what it will buy!" "Money'll never buy me, I'll say." "Marg, who's been fermentin' round lately? Girls, get wise to the flowers." "Hot dog! See Marg blush! That comes from being so pale. What are rouge and lip-stick and powder for but to hide truth from our masculine pursuers?" "Floss, you haven't blushed for a million years."

He was inclined to be an extravagant man like the rest of us before that bother he got into in Belfast over the head of the oul' Queen, but he changed greatly after. The money'll be useful to you, boy, when you start off in life!" "I'll come into the shop with you, Uncle William," John said, glancing towards the scullery where his mother was. "I want to have a word or two with you!"

He can pay, if he finds he must." "It is nearly half-past two," one of them remarked. "No matter. It's of too much importance to him to keep his good name; he'll find somebody to help him. Threaten him with a protest; shake that over his head, and the money'll be raised." With a Siberian aspect, the man returned to me. "Can't do any thing for you," he said. "Sorry for it."

He rushed into speech again: "Loud-voiced, blustering kind of fellow, Image. I never have liked Image. Extraordinary marriage that of his with a connection of poor Aldborough's. Never have understood how her people could allow it." "Oh! money'll buy pretty well everything in this world except brains and a sound liver," Dr.

"We each pay twopence a week till Christmas," he ses, "and we buy a hamper with a goose or a turkey in it, and bottles o' rum and whiskey and gin, as far as the money'll go, and then we all draw lots for it, and the one that wins has it."

I thought a deal of Jackson then. He's not worth a shilling now." "Well, I'm exactly in the same category." "No, you're not. Jackson is nothing without money; but money'll never make you." "No, nor I shan't make money," said the doctor. "No, you never will. Nevertheless, there's my other will, there, under that desk there; and I've put you in as sole executor."

If we can float the shares, the money'll come in quick enough. We hold three million dollars of the stock ourselves. 'Six hundred thousand pounds! said Montague. 'We take them at par, of course, and as we sell we shall pay for them. But of course we shall only sell at a premium. If we can run them up even to 110, there would be three hundred thousand dollars. But we'll do better than that.

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