Chapter

 1   Int|        three volumes in 1854. The two tales are, however, quite
 2     I|           on a wooden board, when two men encountered each other
 3     I|           would be sufficient for two people. Finally he nodded
 4     I|        fruits and sweetmeats, and two hundred odalisks danced
 5     I|           the greater fool of the two - Janaki, who had given
 6     I|        the Janissary had split in two the head of this or that
 7    II|      divided among the dervishes. Two thousand piastres have already
 8    II|         anybody's leave. Here are two piastres, provide therewith
 9    II|           Gül-Bejáze had made the two piastres go as far as they
10    II|           the poet when he said: "Two worlds there are, one beneath
11    II|      gazed into a night lit up by two black suns, and thus she
12   III|      windows of the Seraglio, the two Ulemas who are wont to come
13   III| Khas-Oda-Bashi announced that the two humblest of the Sultan's
14   III|        for the land of the peris. Two eunuchs brought mirrors
15   III|           Kizlar-Aga admitted the two dignitaries who had been
16    IV|   searched for you everywhere for two whole days after you left
17    IV|           first of all promise me two things. The first is, that
18    IV|           know that there are now two of us in the house - I and
19    IV|           of that mule are strung two jars seemingly filled with
20    IV|    Sultana, who was surrounded by two hundred other slave-girls,
21    IV|           the proposition.~ ~"You two may go over to the Janissaries
22     V|          and purple hangings, and two and three fold horse-tails
23     V|             how dare you say that two Janissaries, two of the
24     V|         say that two Janissaries, two of the flowers from Begta'
25     V|         restrain his fury.~ ~"You two are murderers," said he, "
26     V|   pavilion of the Bostanji Bashi, two of whose windows it knocked
27    VI|       various haunts, only one or two belated shapes are now emerging
28   VII|       back the fleet for a day or two.~ ~But what the wind would
29  VIII|          held his own against any two or three ordinary men. Him
30  VIII|          not to insist that these two grey heads shall roll in
31  VIII|           of the Seraglio."~ ~The two grey beards kissed the Sultan'
32  VIII|           beneath the banner, and two piastres a day over and
33  VIII|         the gate. A cart drawn by two oxen was standing there,
34    IX|           me on the Alkoran. Take two from amongst you and let
35    IX|      Mahmud, whereupon taking his two youngest sons by the hand,
36    IX|              On the threshold his two conductors released his
37    IX|        but in front of him walked two men alone, Halil Patrona
38     X|        proclaim her the tyrant of two Sultans, who has the right
39    XI|          then will come to us the two Angels of Judgment, Monker
40   XII|          Seraglio, accompanied by two slave-girls carrying a splendid
41   XII|        promised to disperse under two conditions: a complete amnesty
42   XII|          and permission to retain two of their banners that they
43   XII|          is a horrible thing when two Mussulmans revile one another.
44   XII|        was awaiting them with the two mules. Halil helped his
45   XII|        and immediately afterwards two men entered. They advanced
46  XIII|         table has been spread for two persons.~ ~"Well, thou seest
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