Chapter, Paragraph
1 1, Story8 | will strike his head with a stone.'~ ~ ~
2 1, Story21| head of a pious man with a stone and that the dervish, having
3 1, Story21| vengeance, preserved the stone till the time arrived when~
4 1, Story21| appearance and dropped the stone upon his~head. He asked: '
5 1, Story21| thou hit my head with this~stone?' The man replied: 'I am
6 1, Story21| struck~on the head with this stone on such and such a day.'
7 2, Story47| gets out of the way of the stone.~ ~ ~ The way of dervishes
8 3, Story28| afflicted.~ Throw not a stone at the rampart of a fort~
9 3, Story28| fort~ Because possibly a stone may come from the fort.~ ~ ~
10 3, Story29| Sleep may be had with a stone under the head~ And if there
11 4, Story10| intended to snatch up a stone but it was frozen to the~
12 5, Story20| insulting words,~snatched up a stone and left no injury untried.
13 7, Story18| of my father's tomb is of stone and its epitaph is elegant.
14 7, Story19| like beasts he falls like a stone.~ He whose wishes thou fulfillest
15 7, Story20| forbearest not I will surely stone thee. The man insulted me.
16 8, 34 | his own enemy.~ ~ ~ With a stone in the hand and a snake
17 8, 34 | the hand and a snake on a stone~ It is folly to consider
18 8, 35 | no wonder, because even a stone breaks a jewel.~ ~ ~ What
19 8, 35 | irate.~ Although a base stone may break a golden vase,~
20 8, 35 | vase,~ The price of the stone is not enhanced nor of the
21 8, 39 | insult.~ ~ ~ It takes a stone many a year to become a
22 8, 39 | break it in a moment with a stone.~ ~ ~ ~ ~
23 8, 65 | Though thou throwest a stone at him a hundred times.~
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