Book,  chapter

1    2,   12|     still mingling with the low, sweet song of the wild magpie.~
2    3,   11|        or ruin the early crop of sweet potatoes, these things are
3    3,   13|       consisted of edible ferns, sweet potatoes, the “convolvulus
4    3,   13|          bury his fern roots and sweet potatoes in the soil. The
5    3,   13|          Some thought the flavor sweet and agreeable, others pronounced
6    3,   13| resembling the taste of gum. The sweet potatoes, cooked in the
7    3,   15|         themselves with fern and sweet potato— a poor diet which
8    3,   15|         between the potatoes and sweet potatoes, Paganel moved
9    3,   20|      face suffused with pure and sweet emotion, that the whole
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