Chapter, Paragraph
1 Intro, 2 | distress of the Turks because I saw~ The world entangled like
2 Intro, 2 | blood.~ When I returned I saw the country at rest,~ The
3 Intro, 3 | the opinion of tarrying, I saw that my friend had in his
4 1, Story3 | tall and good-looking, once saw his father~glancing on him
5 1, Story5 | Story 5~ ~ I saw at the palace-gate of Oglimish
6 1, Story8 | I discovered no fault.~I saw that boundless awe of me
7 1, Story12| people for a while.'~ ~ I saw a tyrant sleeping half the
8 1, Story16| acceptance with God.~ I saw no one lost on the straight
9 2, Story2 | Story 2~ ~ I saw a dervish who placed his
10 2, Story2 | commandest I obey.~ ~ I saw a mendicant at the door
11 2, Story3 | Story 3~ ~ I saw A'bd-u-Qader Gaillani in
12 2, Story13| Story 13~ ~ ~ I saw a holy man on the seashore
13 2, Story16| Story 16~ ~ ~ A pious man saw in a dream a padshah in
14 2, Story20| assembly of~people in which I saw a musician.~ ~ ~ Thou wouldst
15 2, Story20| thanked. My friends who saw that my appreciation of
16 2, Story20| happy abode.~ No one ever saw him twice in the same place.~
17 2, Story26| that was. He replied: 'I saw bulbuls commencing to~lament
18 2, Story27| the birds from the sky. I saw, however,~the camel of the
19 2, Story34| desired to visit him but saw the hermit changed from~
20 2, Story43| Story 43~ ~ ~ A pious man saw an acrobat in great dudgeon,
21 2, Story45| Next morning the father saw her thus~ And going to the
22 2, Story48| Story 48~ ~ ~ I saw bouquets of fresh roses~
23 3, Story13| making me a present when I saw his face.'~ ~ ~ Carry not
24 3, Story15| Hatim Tai."~ ~ ~ Then I saw that his sentiments were
25 3, Story16| a few days afterwards he~saw that the dervish was a prisoner
26 3, Story28| last reached a well and~saw people drinking water for
27 3, Story28| spending it. When the people saw the stranger naked~and weeping
28 3, Story28| the figure of the athlete,~saw that his outward appearance
29 4, Story5 | Story 5~ ~ ~ Galenus saw a fool hanging on with his
30 4, Story11| having entered his own house, saw a stranger and,~getting
31 5, Story3 | Story 3~ ~ ~ I saw a religious man, who had
32 5, Story15| account of the dowry. The man saw no means of~escaping from
33 5, Story17| cathedral~mosque of Kashgar and saw an extremely handsome, graceful
34 5, Story20| the pillow of the qazi, saw a lamp standing, the sweetheart
35 6, Story5 | begotten children but I saw~that the root of merriment
36 6, Story6 | woman to her son~ When she saw him overthrow a tiger, and
37 7, Story4 | Story 4~ ~ ~ I saw a schoolmaster in the Maghrib
38 7, Story4 | same mosque~where I again saw the first master whom the
39 7, Story5 | After some time I saw the consequences of his
40 7, Story8 | Story 8~ ~ ~ I saw an Arab of the desert who
41 7, Story12| pugnacity and contention.~I saw a man sitting in a camel
42 7, Story17| his fist every big tree he saw, exclaiming,~boastingly:~ ~ ~
43 7, Story17| feet to the grave.~ ~ ~ I saw the arrow and bow falling
44 7, Story17| extricate his feet.~ ~ ~ We saw no other remedy but to abandon
45 7, Story20| Wealth and Poverty~ ~ ~ I saw a man in the form but not
46 8, Maxim1 | fruit thereof~ Do not put a saw to its foot by imposing
47 8, 17 | hasty man fails.~ ~ ~ I saw with my eyes in the desert~
48 8, 52 | guiltless as foes.~ ~ ~ I saw a crackbrained little man,~
49 8, 58 | lessened.~ ~ ~ When Loqman saw that in the hands of David~
|