Chapter

 1      XVI|       into three rooms, and the roof was covered with thatch.~ ~
 2      XVI|      covered the cottage to the roof, managed to find subsistence.~ ~
 3      XVI|      the thatch that formed the roof.~ ~A bed, a table and two
 4    XVIII| compelled to leave the paternal roof.~ ~In the second week of
 5      XIX|     tossed it upon the thatched roof of his cottage, crying out
 6     XXIV|        to a tiny room under the roof. Mme. dEscorval retired
 7   XXVIII|       to dwell beneath the same roof with you, was happiness.
 8     XXXI|    could he confide? Under what roof could he ask shelter?~ ~
 9     XXXI|      sleeping quietly under his roof, a thirst for gold seized
10     XXXV| reposing under Father Poignot’s roof in comparative security.~ ~
11    XXXIX| thunder-bolt burst beneath that roof, the guests at Sairmeuse
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