Part, Chapter
1 1, 9 | depart from that place,~We felt sorrow at turning our steps
2 1, 10| figure of a lion. But when he felt the pricks of the needles
3 1, 16| as sweet as life, and he felt no anger against his destined
4 1, 16| what a wretch he was.~He felt self-important and proud
5 2, 1 | singing the same words,~So I felt impelled to sing them as
6 2, 11| of prayer, he would have felt deep sorrow and have heaved
7 3, 5 | see the elephant, they all felt it with their hands, to
8 3, 5 | of what it was like. One felt its trunk, and declared
9 3, 5 | resembled a water-pipe; another felt its ear, and said it must
10 3, 5 | must be a pillar; another felt its back, and declared the
11 3, 5 | According to the part which each felt, he gave a different description
12 3, 5 | to the ~hand of one that felt the elephant.~The eye of
13 4, 6 | than the feeling of love felt by lovers. ~The secret I
14 4, 9 | Except the inclination he felt to the world of plants,~
15 5, 1 | During the night the infidel felt very unwell in consequence
16 5, 1 | to take more, saying he felt perfectly satisfied with
17 5, 2 | in token of the sorrow he felt for his dog's death. The
18 5, 12| his head by wrappings of felt. Then the neighbors of the
19 5, 13| exactly the difficulty he felt about the spirit and the
20 6, 5 | for advice. The physician felt his pulse, and perceived
21 6, 5 | tells a tale of pleasure felt by her.~She became not pregnant
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