Chapter, Paragraph
1 Intro, 1 | their daily allowance of~bread for great crimes.~ ~ O bountiful
2 Intro, 1 | sky~ That thou mayest gain bread, and not eat it unconcerned.~
3 1, Story3 | man eats half a loaf of bread~ He bestows the other half
4 1, Story16| parts, namely, the hope for bread and the~danger of life,
5 1, Story17| nevertheless bestows the bread.'~ ~ The governor, being
6 1, Story36| is better to eat~barley bread and to sit than to gird
7 1, Story36| belly, be satisfied with one bread~ Rather than to bend the
8 2, Story28| last, I was distressed for~bread and now a world of distress
9 2, Story34| disposition~ Requires not the bread of the rebat nor the begged
10 2, Story36| maintenance it is~forbidden.'~ ~ ~ Bread is taken for the corner
11 2, Story36| the corner of devotion for bread.~ ~ ~ ~ ~
12 2, Story37| condition,~produced a table with bread but as he began to eat greedily
13 2, Story37| To a pounded man simple bread is pounded meat.'~ ~ ~ ~ ~
14 2, Story47| dervish may be in need of bread~ In that hour when both
15 3, Story3 | We are contented with dry bread and a patched robe~ For
16 3, Story8 | injures thee~ But eating dry bread after a long fast is like
17 3, Story11| avarice.~ ~ ~ If instead of bread he had the sun in his table-cloth~
18 3, Story12| lowered.'~ ~ ~ He increased my bread but diminished my honour.~
19 3, Story15| replied:~ ~ ~ "Who eats bread by the work of his own hand~
20 3, Story23| his life give a morsel of bread to anyone or bestow a scrap~
21 3, Story28| not lost in~struggling for bread; as wise men have said:~ ~ ~
22 3, Story29| hoped he~would partake of bread and salt with him. The sheikh
23 5, Story20| Is sweeter than eating bread with one's own hand.~ ~ ~
24 7, Story20| those who are hungry steal bread.~ ~ ~ When a ferocious dog
25 8, 12 | will be satisfied with one bread. Wise men have~said that
26 8, 12 | intestines may be filled with dry bread~ But the wealth of the surface
27 8, 46 | Maxim 45~ ~ ~ Whose bread is not eaten by others while
28 8, 56 | vegetables~ Are better than bread received as alms, and veal.~ ~ ~ ~ ~
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