Chapter

 1     I|          in time run up the whole house, and from out of the midst
 2     I|         here all by myself. Every house is fast closed. Not one
 3     I|        arrived at last at his own house.~ ~Were we to speak of "
 4     I|       shortest way to everybody's house was through his neighbour'
 5     I|         mysterious harmony, every house was so arranged that the
 6     I|     behind him.~ ~Halil Patrona's house was of wood like the rest.
 7     I|          carpet obtainable in the house, and the guest observing
 8     I|           s help I will quit your house and pursue my way further."~ ~
 9     I|        therefore, go back to your house, take this letter together
10     I|              I will not leave his house till he has given me a voucher
11     I|            and on the wall of the house opposite both their names
12     I|      steps once more towards that house where he had chalked up
13     I|          beneath the eaves of the house on a spot where[Pg 35] Pelivan'
14    II|        angels on the walls of his house, or trample on his talisman
15    II|           word.~ ~On reaching the house Halil made the girl sit
16    II|       kindly voice.~ ~"Here is my house, whatever you see in it
17    II|   ornaments or frankincense in my house, but you can go[Pg 43] in
18    II|     leaving the girl alone in the house. He did not return home
19   III|          have been searching from house to house, making inquiries,
20   III|           searching from house to house, making inquiries, listening
21   III|       whom he had welcomed to his house as a guest."~ ~"What is
22   III|           is free to go about the house as she likes. Halil will
23   III|         him who would rob his own house. It will be known unto thee,
24    IV|           did all the work of the house instead of her, just as
25    IV|           to receive me into your house as a guest once more?"~ ~"
26    IV|        and pitch your tent at the house of my worthy neighbour Musli,
27    IV|           may I not sleep at your house?"~ ~"Because you must know
28    IV|          are now two of us in the house - I and my slave-girl."~ ~"
29    IV| slave-girl down with you into the house."~ ~"It cannot be so, Janaki!
30    IV|           to deposit them at your house. I suppose your slave-girl
31    IV|       thither he looked in at the house of his neighbour, the well-mannered
32    IV|       sought after you find in my house, eh? Allah preordained it.
33    IV|        the breath of life in this house, for to have heard the secret
34     V|           thinkest thou? - if thy house was on fire[Pg 104] and
35    VI|          the canal to his country house at Chengelköi, having just
36    VI|           stopped in front of the house of the Janissary Aga.~ ~"
37    VI|       battered in the door of his house and released their comrades.
38  VIII|        found Sulali in his summer house, and at the first summons
39  VIII|         dragged by force from his house where he had been hiding
40  VIII|        captivity of the Kapudan's house, and in the dungeon for
41     X|           appear on the roof of a house, or show himself at a window,
42   XII|          the deliberations at the house of the Grand Vizier. For
43   XII|         you were to hear that his house was on fire, would he need
44  XIII|           woman comes back to the house full of joy, her cheeks
45  XIII|           way, and must be in the house by now."~ ~The servant fancies
46  XIII|         at whom?~ ~And inside the house she prepares his bed for
47   Sel|    Speaker.~ ~[Pg 281]~ ~The Gray House of the Quarries. (Second
48   Sel|   Florence Warden, Author of "The House on the Marsh," etc. 3/6~ ~"
49   Sel|         Conney, Author of "A Lady House Breaker," "Gold for Dross,"
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