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1 I | rich enough to have a good room; I was not even rich~enough
2 I | even rich~enough to have a room to myself. Juste and I shared
3 I | I shared a double-bedded~room on the fifth floor.~ ~On
4 I | indeed told us that the room was inhabited, but~she had
5 I | never heard a sound in his room, in spite of the~thinness
6 I | common in Paris houses.~ ~Our room, a little over seven feet
7 II | and I~could not see any room for us in the two professions
8 III| were formed in the little room in the lodging-~house in
9 III| accustomed~to go up to our room and remain there a while,
10 IV | would be no light in the~room, and on putting my eye to
11 IV | noise in our neighbor's room. He got up, struck a~match,
12 IV | copying law-papers.~ ~His room was about half the size
13 IV | an obtuse angle, and the room was~not square. There was
14 IV | in the skew side of the room, had shabby red curtains.
15 IV | asked the price of that room, and were told~fifteen francs
16 V | then he~came to sit in our room, bringing the tobacco with
17 X | cried, rushing into his room. "Why refuse?~He really
18 XI | then living~alone in our room, and I was the most attentive
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