Chapter

 1     1| interest. Boivin named all the fish who frolicked under this
 2     2|       books, without rules, to fish successfully, to the left
 3     2|   halts at no difficulty, then fish before, during and after
 4     2|      hunger or terror, all the fish forget their habits in a
 5     2|  victory!"~ ~In order to catch fish of all sizes, he bought
 6     2|     fall of the dam, where the fish are most plentiful.~ ~Boivin
 7     2|     bite. I don't come here to fish; I come because I'm very
 8     2|       meal everyone started to fish again, but the two new friends
 9     2|        lines in the water. The fish still refused to bite, but
10     2|       a wild desire to catch a fish, just one, any kind, any
11     2|       string was a tiny little fish. When they looked at him
12     2|     joy; he wished to have the fish fried for himself alone.~ ~
13     2|      caught fourteen pounds of fish during the day.~ ~
14     5|     pick flowers and eat fried fish. She laughed with a shrillness
15     5|       three of the little oily fish she declared that she was
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