Chapter, Paragraph
1 Intro, 4 | he is~certainly called to account and becomes subject to reproaches,~
2 1, Story6 | world and chose exile on account of~the affliction entailed
3 1, Story16| his hand tremble at the account."'~ ~ Straightness is the
4 1, Story16| what has he to~fear whose account of the conscience is clear?'~ ~
5 1, Story16| enemies~appear as friends.'~ ~ Account him not a friend who knocks
6 1, Story16| favours.~ ~ Sit not morose on account of the turns of time; for
7 1, Story23| fault for not having taken account of the maxim of philosophers
8 1, Story27| superiority to my~teacher on account of his age and from gratitude
9 1, Story30| not thine own injury on account of the anger~thou bearest
10 1, Story31| have been wrong, we may, on account of having followed it,~remain
11 1, Story33| happened~to be called to account by the king for something
12 2, Story39| is not proper merely on account of~this vain fancy to turn
13 3, Story14| is to be considered of no account.~
14 3, Story16| beheld a dervish who had on account of~his nudity concealed
15 3, Story16| allowance because I~am, on account of my distress, on the point
16 3, Story23| their relative.'~ ~ ~ On account of the acquaintance which
17 3, Story28| locality very dangerous on account of~thieves. The people of
18 4, Story12| Istakhar-Fares quakes.~ ~ ~ On account of the position he occupied
19 5, Story15| remained in the house on account of the dowry. The man saw
20 5, Story17| I replied: 'I cannot on account of the following~adventure
21 5, Story19| Laila and Mejnun, with an account of the latter's~insanity,
22 5, Story20| most~learned men, and I account him to be the paragon of
23 7, Story17| being~full of danger on account of robbers, a young man
24 7, Story19| reason of the tradition:~Account as an enemy the passion
25 7, Story20| Lion-hearted men were on account of their necessities~captured
26 7, Story20| of modest women have on account of poverty fallen into~complete
27 7, Story20| mendicants and insult poor men on account of the wealth~which they
28 7, Story20| man.~ ~ ~ If a wretch on account of his wealth is proud to
29 8, 16 | everywhere, and therefore of no account,~ But a ruby difficult to
30 End | shortsighted persons have on this account lengthened the~tongue of
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