FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   76   77   78   79   80   81   82   83   84   85   86   87   88   89   90   91   92   93   94   95   96   >>  
uld think it over. The next morning after breakfast, Boaz said, "I have solved your problem, sir; come in here and I will tell you about it." He took me into his private office, and, after counting out three thousand florins in notes and gold, he told me that if I liked I could undoubtedly make the twenty thousand florins I had spoken of. Much surprised at the ease with which money may be got in Holland, as I had been merely jesting in the remarks I had made, I thanked him for his kindness, and listened to his explanation. "Look at this note," said he, "which I received this morning from the Mint. It informs me that an issue of four hundred thousand ducats is about to be made which will be disposed of at the current rate of gold, which is fortunately not high just now. Each ducat will fetch five florins, two stivers and three-fifths. This is the rate of exchange with Frankfort. Buy in four hundred thousand ducats; take them or send them to Frankfort, with bills of exchange on Amsterdam, and your business is done. On every ducat you will make a stiver and one-ninth, which comes to twenty-two thousand, two hundred and twenty-two of our florins. Get hold of the gold to-day, and in a week you will have your clear profit. That's my idea." "But," said I, "will the clerks of the Mint trust me with such a sum?" "Certainly not, unless you pay them in current money or in good paper." "My dear sir, I have neither money nor credit to that amount." "Then you will certainly never make twenty thousand florins in a week. By the way you talked yesterday I took you for a millionaire." "I am very sorry you were so mistaken." "I shall get one of my sons to transact the business to-day." After giving me this rather sharp lesson, M. Boaz went into his office, and I went to dress. M. d'Afri had paid his call on me at the "Hotel d'Angleterre," and not finding me there he had written me a letter asking me to come and see him. I did so, and he kept me to dinner, shewing me a letter he had received from M. de Boulogne, in which he was instructed not to let me dispose of the twenty millions at a greater loss than eight per cent., as peace was imminent. We both of us laughed at this calm confidence of the Parisian minister, while we who were in a country where people saw deeper into affairs knew that the truth was quite otherwise. On M. d'Afri's hearing that I was staying with a Jew, he advised me to keep my own counse
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   76   77   78   79   80   81   82   83   84   85   86   87   88   89   90   91   92   93   94   95   96   >>  



Top keywords:

thousand

 

florins

 

twenty

 

hundred

 

received

 

morning

 

letter

 

business

 

Frankfort

 
exchange

current
 

ducats

 

office

 
millionaire
 

written

 

yesterday

 
Angleterre
 

talked

 
finding
 

transact


giving
 

lesson

 

mistaken

 

hearing

 

confidence

 

Parisian

 

deeper

 

laughed

 

affairs

 

counse


minister

 

people

 

country

 
imminent
 

Boulogne

 

advised

 

shewing

 
dinner
 

instructed

 
dispose

millions
 
greater
 

staying

 

Holland

 

jesting

 

surprised

 

remarks

 

thanked

 
informs
 

kindness