Chapter, Paragraph
1 Intro, 1 | thou brought us~from the garden in which thou hast been?'
2 Intro, 3 | to spend the night in a garden with one of my friends and~
3 Intro, 3 | Pleiads were suspended.~ ~ A garden the water of whose river
4 Intro, 3 | knowest~that the roses of the garden are perishable and the season
5 Intro, 3 | present a book of a Rose Garden, a~Gulistan, whose leaves
6 Intro, 3 | short, some roses of the~garden still remained when the
7 Intro, 5 | bouquet-binding but not in the garden. I sell a sweetheart~but
8 Intro, 5 | diction of this beautiful garden and luxuriant grove and
9 1, Story4 | eaten any fruit from the garden of life~and has not yet
10 1, Story4 | cause tulips to grow in a garden and weeds in bad soil.~
11 1, Story16| To levy a tax on land and garden.~ Either consent to bear
12 1, Story19| eats one apple from the garden of a subject~ His slaves
13 1, Story33| of friends~ Sell even the garden of thy father.~ In order
14 2, Story32| to be with strangers in a garden.'~ ~ ~ He took pity on my
15 2, Story48| after all the grass of his garden?~ I am the slave of a bountiful
16 3, Story29| be without the sight of a garden.~ The brain may be without
17 5, Story10| They said: "Verdure in the garden is pleasing."~ He knows
18 5, Story10| lovers more and more.~ Thy garden is a bed of leeks.~ The
19 5, Story18| about like a peacock in the garden of union~ But today, through
20 7, Story15| How-every time the plants in the garden~ Sprouted-glad became my
21 7, Story20| Perceivest thou not that in a garden there are musk-willows as
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