Part, Chapter
1 1, 3 | twas said, "Thyself art thy master,~Inasmuch as thou art acquainted
2 1, 3 | art acquainted with the Master of all;~Be a man, and not
3 1, 5 | conceal your claws?~When a master places a spade in the hand
4 1, 5 | spade, our hands are our Master's hints to us;~Yea, if ye
5 1, 5 | is this thou ridest on, O master?"~He says, "True, 'tis a
6 1, 7 | formal religion.~He who is master of the robes of a king~Brings
7 1, 13| was hardened against his master, and he became a renegade,
8 1, 16| one day assassinate his master.~"The Prophet whispered
9 2, 1 | carefully; but when his master's back was turned he neglected
10 2, 1 | him, could not carry his master, but had to be led. The
11 2, 6 | STORY VI. Luqman's Master examines him and discovers
12 2, 6 | by God," was a slave. His master, however, discovered his
13 2, 6 | apparent relish that his master was tempted to taste it.
14 2, 6 | for him, who lived on his master's bounty, to complain if
15 2, 11| an anecdote is told of a master of a house who caught a
16 3, 2 | pretension to be a tailor, ~The master places before him a piece
17 3, 8 | played by boys upon their master. The boys wished to obtain
18 3, 8 | suggested that when the master came into the school each
19 3, 8 | he entered, one said, "O master, how pale you are looking!"
20 3, 8 | ill today," and so on. The master at first answered that there
21 3, 12| has made itself lord and master.~That slayer of the cow
22 3, 13| who obtained leave of his master to say his prayers in a
23 3, 13| could not get out, nor his master in. The prophets at last
24 3, 15| bread which fell from their master's table, because the cock
25 3, 15| said that on the morrow the master's horse would die, and then
26 3, 15| enough and to spare. The master, hearing this, at once sold
27 3, 15| would die, whereupon the master sold the mule. Then the
28 3, 15| death of a slave, and the master again sold the slave. At
29 3, 15| he had predicted, but the master had sold the horse, mule,
30 3, 15| fraudulent dealing, the master would himself die on the
31 3, 15| feast. Hearing this, the master went to Moses in great distress,
32 3, 17| burning heart ~Ascended to his master and excited his compassion.~
33 4, 2 | guilt,~That the Heavenly Master may not withhold instruction.~
34 4, 3 | him with dishonoring his master by his stinginess. The youth
35 5, 6 | jealous for the honor of his master, followed him, and thus
36 5, 10| starved and worked hard in its master's service, by chance found
37 5, 10| preferable, and returned to its master. The fox replied that the
38 5, 12| servant went and told his master. The noble was very wrathful
39 6, 1 | Hindu Slave who loved his Master's Daughter.~A certain man
40 6, 4 | Mecca, and had incurred his master's displeasure in consequence
41 6, 4 | Islam. For this offence his master tortured him by exposing
42 6, 4 | or even lower. Hilal's master was a Mosalman, yet one
43 6, 4 | to that of animals. This master, however, was blind to Hilal'
44 6, 6 | ignorant man is ashamed of a master,~Perforce he goes and opens
45 6, 6 | is higher than your true master, O beloved,~And hard of
46 6, 9 | Friend of God," 3~Know, O master, the form of wheat was dispensed
47 6, 9 | they deny their Lord and Master?~They exist only through
48 6, 9 | Of him, of whom I am the master, 'Ali also is master," and
49 6, 9 | the master, 'Ali also is master," and is therefore able
|