Part, Chapter
1 1, 5 | might to the Seven Sleepers' dog. 7~What mattered its despised
2 2, 1 | cultivator~Are as grass before a dog or bones before an ass.~
3 2, 2 | And by the tricks of this dog what there is is lost.~In
4 2, 2 | perishing by his insolence.~The dog is one, yet he enters a
5 2, 8 | becomes a friend;~Even as the dog of the cave became a son
6 3, 2 | door, be not viler than a dog,~If thou wouldest rival
7 3, 2 | rival the Seven Sleepers' dog.~God's claims to our gratitude.~
8 3, 15| between the cock and the dog. The dog was abusing the
9 3, 15| the cock and the dog. The dog was abusing the cock for
10 3, 15| corn to eat, whereas the dog could only eat bread. The
11 3, 15| would die, and then the dog would have enough and to
12 3, 15| sold his horse, and the dog, being disappointed of his
13 3, 15| sold the slave. At this the dog, losing patience, upbraided
14 3, 15| would be plenty for the dog to eat at the funeral feast.
15 3, 18| soul is hidden.~O reviling dog! thou makest a clamour, ~
16 5, 2 | STORY II. The Arab and his Dog.~The doctrine of the Mu'
17 5, 2 | Thus a certain Arab had a dog to which he was much attached;
18 5, 2 | attached; but one day the dog died of hunger. He at once
19 5, 2 | and on hearing that the dog had died of hunger, he asked
20 5, 2 | the sorrow he felt for his dog's death. The neighbor, on
21 5, 7 | their spears,~And saying, "O dog, begone to thy kennel!"~
22 5, 11| resembles the Turkoman's dog who sits at the door of
23 5, 13| heavens,~He himself was as the dog at the tent-door.~When the
24 6, 4 | up like a gourd, O little dog rose;~Even though your prop
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