Part, Chapter
1 1, 1 | Reason sticks fast, as an ass in mire;~Naught but Love
2 1, 5 | from the lion and the wild ass.~It fills its cells with
3 1, 14| burden.~God saith, "As an ass bearing a load of books," 1~
4 2, 1 | his servant to groom his ass carefully and give him plenty
5 2, 1 | promised to attend to the ass most carefully; but when
6 2, 1 | turned he neglected the ass, and the poor animal remained
7 2, 1 | his owner thought that the ass was useless, and when they
8 2, 1 | the night, they sold the ass to a traveler, and with
9 2, 1 | feast. The owner of the ass, who was ignorant of this
10 2, 1 | sung by the others, "The ass is gone, the ass is gone,"
11 2, 1 | others, "The ass is gone, the ass is gone," without attaching
12 2, 1 | servant what had become of the ass, and the servant told him
13 2, 1 | had heard him singing "The ass is gone" along with the
14 2, 1 | a dog or bones before an ass.~The words, "I am the Truth"
15 2, 1 | were always saying, 'The ass is gone, my lad!'~Along
16 2, 7 | Jesus, thou cherishest an ass (lust),~And art perforce
17 2, 7 | perforce excluded, like an ass;~The portion of Jesus is
18 2, 7 | Not so the portion of an ass, O asinine one!~Thou pitiest
19 2, 7 | one!~Thou pitiest thine ass when it complains;~So art
20 2, 7 | So art thou ignorant, thy ass makes thee asinine.~Keep
21 2, 7 | pity for Jesus, not for the ass,~Make not thy lust to vanquish
22 3, 2 | shooting the villager's pet ass in mistake for a wolf. The
23 3, 2 | would not have taken an ass for a wolf, even on the
24 4, 2 | rather than hunt the wild ass (Gor) on the mountains in
25 4, 6 | mercy;~But if you are an ass, I give you the stick as
26 4, 6 | give you the stick as an ass.~So I will drive you out
27 4, 6 | purpose of correcting ~Every ass who does not prove tractable. ~
28 4, 8 | the dead bones of thine ass; we will raise them and
29 4, 9 | Husamu-'d-Din, admit~This ass's head into that melon-garden!~
30 4, 9 | melon-garden!~For when this ass is killed in the slaughter-house~
31 5, 10| The Lion, the Fox, and the Ass.~As an instance of false
32 5, 10| found a lean and hungry ass who was grazing in a stony
33 5, 10| salutations, condoled with the ass on his unfortunate condition;
34 5, 10| unfortunate condition; but the ass replied that it was his
35 5, 10| instanced the case of the ass of a water-carrier, which,
36 5, 10| The fox replied that the ass was wrong in carrying passive
37 5, 10| God." 1 He added, if the ass would come with him, he
38 5, 10| all the year round. The ass rejoined that the command
39 5, 10| not found by everyone. The ass rejoined that the fox was
40 5, 10| The fox again pressed the ass to try to better his condition,
41 5, 10| to do anything with. The ass answered that he knew of
42 5, 10| ruin." 2 But though the ass repeated all these excellent
43 5, 10| manliness to protect it. The ass, though like Abraham, he
44 5, 10| object" 3.] Finally the ass yielded to the fox's enticement,
45 5, 10| missed his aim, and the ass escaped with a slight wound.
46 5, 10| fox to try to allure the ass a second time into his lair.
47 5, 10| have been thrown away on an ass, and his vows of repentance
48 5, 10| fox was received by the ass with many reproaches for
49 5, 10| managed to persuade the ass that what he had seen was
50 5, 10| talisman; and the silly ass allowed himself to be again
51 5, 10| domination over it.~Although the ass repeated verities to the
52 5, 10| illusions effect on a stupid ass?~Human reason is drowned,
53 5, 10| in Him.~The fate of the ass then suggests to the poet
54 5, 10| After the lion had slain the ass, he went to the river to
55 5, 10| fox assured him that the ass had possessed neither a
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