Chapter, Paragraph
1 Intro, 4 | from the great Amir, who is learned,~just, aided by heaven,
2 Intro, 4 | of strangers, patron of learned men, lover of the~pious,
3 1, Story39| livelihood~ At which the learned stand aghast.~ The luck
4 3, Story28| The presence of a learned man is like pure gold~ Whose
5 4, Story3 | to sit~in assemblies of learned men but he refrained from
6 4, Story5 | hands to the collar of a~learned man and insulting him, whereon
7 4, Story5 | whereon he said: 'If he were learned he~would not have come to
8 5, Story9 | Story 9~ ~ ~ I knew a learned man who had fallen in love
9 5, Story13| that no matter how much a~learned man may hate an ignorant
10 5, Story20| that he is one of the most~learned men, and I account him to
11 6, Story1 | disputation with a company of learned men in the~cathedral mosque
12 6, Story5 | accidentally met him again and I~learned that he had married a wife
13 7, Story1 | instruction but ineffectually, the learned man sent one~to his father
14 7, Story2 | Everyone left his snug corner.~ Learned sons of peasants~ Became
15 7, Story6 | reproved and threatened the learned man with punishment, telling
16 7, Story17| of a legal question to a learned man.~ ~ ~ ~ ~
17 8, Maxim2 | in thee.~ Neither deeply learned nor a scholar will be~ A
18 8, Maxim4 | Maxim 4~ ~ ~ A learned man who is not abstinent
19 8, 19 | disputes with one who is more learned than himself to~make people
20 8, 38 | like a war-drum.~ ~ ~ A learned man among blockheads~ (So
21 8, 45 | blamable but more so in~learned men, because learning is
22 8, 45 | ignorant poor fellow~ Then a learned man who is not abstemious;~
23 8, 53 | One being asked what a learned man without practice resembled,~
24 8, 60 | ignorant man,~ For if thou be learned, thou wilt be an ass in
25 8, 63 | but not~where it is, and I learned that he refrained because
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