Chapter, Paragraph
1 Intro, 1 | slain by the beloved.~ No voice can come from the slain.~ ~
2 Intro, 1 | lost its life, and found no voice.~ These pretenders are ignorantly
3 2, Story20| with his fiddle-bow.~ His voice was more unpleasant than
4 2, Story20| parties.'~ ~ ~ A pleasant voice, from a sweet palate, mouth
5 2, Story26| perhaps heard my distressed voice~ Said: 'I could not believe
6 3, Story28| Fourthly, one with a sweet voice, who retains, with a David-like~
7 3, Story28| handsome face is a pleasant voice.~ The former is joy to the
8 4, Story12| preacher imagined his miserable voice to be pleasing and raised~
9 4, Story12| of voices is surely the voice of asses- appears to have
10 4, Story12| Abu-l-Fares brays~ At his voice Istakhar-Fares quakes.~ ~ ~
11 4, Story12| dreamt?' 'I dreamt that thy voice had become pleasant and
12 4, Story12| that I have a disagreeable voice and that the~people are
13 4, Story12| them except in a subdued voice':~ ~ ~ I am displeased with
14 4, Story13| mosque of~Sinjar and in a voice which displeased all who
15 4, Story14| fellow with a disagreeable voice happened to be reading the
16 5, Story10| sweetheart~who had a melodious voice and a form beautiful like
17 5, Story10| afterwards but~his melodious voice had changed, his Joseph
18 5, Story17| spite of thy presence no voice came to say: I am he.~ ~ ~
19 8, Admon1 | of princes and the sweet voice of children are not to be~
20 8, 9 | care not to listen to the voice of a flatterer~ Who expects
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