Part, chapter

 1    1,    1|        the foot of a magnificent tree, he did not even admire
 2    1,    1|         climb to the top of this tree I can see the roof under
 3    1,    1|          hollow of a root of the tree beneath which he was sitting.
 4    1,    1|        ready at the foot of some tree in the open forest. And
 5    1,    2|  presence, at ten paces from the tree, without being perceived.~
 6    1,    2|       the man at the foot of the tree, but the sleeper did not
 7    1,    2|          began to move round the tree. He stepped slowly, holding
 8    1,    2|      second time close up to the tree, placed himself at the side,
 9    1,    2|         hide himself behind some tree trunk, to disappear under
10    1,    2|         of an enormous ficus—the tree of which the different kinds
11    1,    2|        himself to the top of the tree, to the point where the
12    1,    2|         directed them toward the tree, although the position taken
13    1,    3|         wounded by the fall of a tree. Carried home helpless to
14    1,    6|         made from the trunk of a tree, hollowed out by fire, and
15    1,    6|      unaccustomed to these great tree massacres would perhaps
16    1,    6|           There was not a single tree which could not be used
17    1,    6|      from their base, rejoin the tree some thirty feet up the
18    1,    7|    whether it be large or small, tree or plant, and all the heat
19    1,    7|         The cipo passed from one tree to another without breaking
20    1,    7|        and the monkeys fled from tree to tree, so as to point
21    1,    7|        monkeys fled from tree to tree, so as to point out the
22    1,    7|        the light of the sun, the tree of the tropics, par excellence,
23    1,    7|       they saw him rush toward a tree; they all ran as well.~Sight
24    1,    9|         the roots of that little tree, some six or ten feet in
25    1,   12|           at the foot of a large tree.~The collection of cabins
26    1,   17| extracted from the “seringueiratree, whose scientific name is
27    1,   17|        ground at the foot of the tree.~The sap being obtained,
28    1,   18|        so oddly stretch from one tree to another!” added the young
29    1,   18|          round the trunk of some tree, unroll themselves, hang
30    2,    2|      restrain her tears, and the tree entered the house.~The two
31    2,   14|          the foliage of a mimosa tree, betook themselves to flight.
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