Chapter, Paragraph
1 1, Story4 | great and carrying off a camel with its load.'~ ~ In short,
2 1, Story16| connection hast thou with a~camel and what resemblance does
3 1, Story16| malevolently say that I am a camel and~I am caught, who will
4 1, Story35| desert, he seated me on~his camel, whereas I had received
5 2, Story12| laying myself down, told the~camel driver to let me alone.~ ~ ~
6 2, Story17| I am neither riding a camel nor under a load like a
7 2, Story17| nor under a load like a camel.~ I am neither a lord of
8 2, Story27| sky. I saw, however,~the camel of the a'bid, which began
9 2, Story27| The Arabic verses threw a camel into ecstasy and joy.~ If
10 2, Story27| ill-natured brute.~ ~ ~ When a camel's head is turned by the
11 3, Story22| possessed one hundred and fifty camel loads of~merchandise with
12 6, Story4 | gallops twice in a race.~ A camel ambles gently night and
13 7, Story12| I saw a man sitting in a camel litter and saying to his
14 7, Story12| Thou art not a Haji but a camel is one~ Because, poor brute,
15 7, Story20| not whether it is of the camel of Saleh or the ass of~
16 8, 61 | The meekness of the camel is known to be such that
17 8, 61 | desires to approach it, the camel tears~the bridle from his
|