Chapter, Paragraph
1 Intro, 3 | of life is spent,~ If I consider, not much of it remains.~
2 Intro, 3 | Although intelligent men consider silence civil,~ It is better
3 Intro, 3 | speaking~to him, and did not consider it polite to turn away my
4 Intro, 3 | thou fightest with anyone, consider~ Whether thou wilt have
5 Intro, 5 | It is better for me to~consider what to speak than to repent
6 1, Story2 | away.~ Do good, O man, and consider life as a good fortune,~
7 1, Story16| thy adopted brother.~ I consider him a friend who takes a
8 1, Story24| nobles of this~realm would consider it an honour to see him
9 2, Story1 | seest in a religious habit~ Consider him to be a religious and
10 2, Story5 | therefrom~because I for one consider myself sufficiently strong
11 3, Story3 | aware of thy case, he will consider it an obligation to~comfort
12 3, Story13| aware of his~want, would not consider it proper to fail in supplying
13 4, Story1 | near a good man~ Except to consider him as a most wicked liar.~ ~ ~
14 5, Story20| which I have decreed; and I~consider it proper to throw thee
15 6, Story1 | mouth are being extracted?~ Consider what his state will be at
16 6, Story2 | better than thyself and consider it fortunate~ Because with
17 6, Story5 | cunningly dyed thy hair but consider~ That thy bent back will
18 7, Story5 | condition, in which I did not consider it~humane to scratch his
19 7, Story20| them with contempt. They consider~scholars to be mendicants
20 7, Story20| wealth is proud to a sage~ Consider him to be the podex of an
21 8, 18 | silence, and if he were~to consider it to be suitable, he would
22 8, 34 | a stone~ It is folly to consider and to delay.~ ~ ~ Others,
23 8, 46 | art riding a fleet horse, consider~ That the poor thorn-carrying
24 8, 55 | qalandars.~ ~ ~ Dervishes will consider it licit to shed thy blood~
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