Chapter, Paragraph
1 Intro, 1 | could'st thou disappoint thy friends,~ Whilst having regard for
2 Intro, 1 | rose-tree,~as presents for my friends but the perfume of the flowers~
3 Intro, 2 | exalt the dignities of his friends and governors; annihilate
4 Intro, 3 | it is foolish to insult friends and easy to expiate an oath.
5 Intro, 3 | a garden with one of my friends and~we found it to be a
6 1, Story9 | me~ For the last time, O friends. Pass near me.~ My life
7 1, Story16| Story 16~ ~ One of my friends complained of the unpropitious
8 1, Story16| philosophers has come~true, that friends are useful in prison because
9 1, Story16| table all enemies~appear as friends.'~ ~ Account him not a friend
10 1, Story16| to go with a company of friends on a journey~to Mekkah and
11 1, Story16| well-wishers with my kind friends who failed to speak the~
12 1, Story17| save the allowance of my friends and intended~to wait upon
13 1, Story17| ordered the support of~my friends to be attended to as before
14 1, Story21| hand.~ Then, to please thy friends, pick out his brains.~ ~ ~
15 1, Story26| to hear him saying to his friends: 'I do not know whence~this
16 1, Story33| order to gain the hearts of friends~ Sell even the garden of
17 2, Story4 | quarrelest and wagest war against friends?~ ~ ~ The friendship of
18 2, Story14| Sweep out the house of friends and do not~knock at the
19 2, Story14| foes of their skins and thy friends of their fur-coats.~ ~ ~
20 2, Story20| short, I tried to please my friends and succeeded after a~considerable
21 2, Story20| embraced and thanked. My friends who saw that my appreciation
22 2, Story26| consciousness.~ One of my intimate friends who~ Had perhaps heard my
23 2, Story28| dervish until one of his old~friends, who had been his companion
24 2, Story29| open their heart's grief to friends.~ ~ ~ ~ ~
25 2, Story31| it to escape. He~said: 'Friends, I had no option in what
26 2, Story32| Having become tired of my friends in Damascus, I went into
27 2, Story32| The feet in chains with friends~ Is better than to be with
28 2, Story44| they prefer to please~their friends rather than themselves;
29 3, Story14| hermaphrodite. I owe it to my friends~not to describe him because
30 3, Story28| cities, associating with~friends, acquisition of dignity,
31 3, Story28| Accordingly he invited one of his friends to dispel~the terrors of
32 4, Story12| displeased with the company of friends~ To whom my bad qualities
33 5, Story4 | and said:~ ~ ~ 'Tell my friends not to give me advice~ Because
34 5, Story4 | her threshold.~ ~ ~ His friends, who considered his position,
35 5, Story7 | When thou comest with friends to visit me~ Although thou
36 5, Story14| of dervishes?~ ~ ~ Some friends bore witness not so much
37 5, Story15| with her until a company of friends paid him a~visit of condolence
38 5, Story15| connection with a thousand friends~ Rather than to behold a
39 5, Story17| say that he who parts from friends is an apple.~ One half of
40 5, Story19| Mejnun replied:~ ~ ~ 'Many friends have blamed me for loving
41 5, Story19| lamented with me.~ O company of friends, say to him who is unconcerned~ '
42 5, Story20| unanimous advice of his friends and~appreciated their good
43 5, Story20| view taken by his beloved friends on the arrangement~of his
44 5, Story20| no worldly~goods has no friends in the whole world:~ ~ ~
45 6, Story9 | steel.~ He complained to his friends and showed proofs~ That
46 8, Maxim8 | that as~the friendship of friends is unreliable, what trust
47 8, Admon5 | to shame if~they become friends.~ ~ ~ Between two men contention
48 8, Admon5 | When both of them become friends again~ He will among them
49 8, Admon5 | Converse in whispers with thy friends~ Lest thy sanguinary foe
50 8, Admon6 | with the enemies of his friends greatly~injures his friends.~ ~ ~
51 8, Admon6 | friends greatly~injures his friends.~ ~ ~ Wash thy hands, O
52 8, Admon11| retain the confidence of his friends. The~fire of anger first
53 8, 2 | and sit in repose with thy friends~ When thou seest war among
54 8, 38 | says the parable of our friends)~ Is like a sweetheart among
55 8, 55 | property.~ Either make no friends with elephant-keepers~ Or
56 8, 72 | been~flung?~ ~ ~ To the friends of God a dark night~ Shines
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