Chapter

 1    II|       bosom - but he could not hear the beating of the heart.
 2    IV|        money."~ ~"I am glad to hear it, Halil, and I hope the
 3    IV|       of your neighbours might hear you, and would think nothing
 4     V|        The Janissary Aga could hear this bellowing quite plainly,
 5     V|     plainly, but he also could hear the Janissary guard in front
 6    VI|       sent to the shambles, we hear their cries, we see their
 7    VI|        murmur, and now you can hear roars instead of murmurs.
 8  VIII|        Sultan pretended not to hear these words. He did not
 9    IX| fingers.~ ~Perchance she could hear the sighing and the sobbing
10    XI|     order that I might see and hear nothing but what he commanded
11    XI|        what he commanded me to hear and see.~ ~"And I wrote
12    XI|        answer, I say, when you hear the brazen voice cry: 'Ye
13    XI|    everyone of us who see, who hear, and yet go on dreaming!
14    XI|      of the Feast of Halwet we hear a Sheik, a descendant of
15    XI|       to think, I say, when we hear this Sheik say before the
16    XI|       quite deaf. He could not hear a word of Musli's last demand.~ ~
17    XI| talking about."~ ~"Yes, yes! I hear, I hear. You want him to
18    XI|            Yes, yes! I hear, I hear. You want him to be[Pg 236]
19   XII|      If any one of you were to hear that his house was on fire,
20   XII|   extinguish it? If ye were to hear that robbers had broken
21   XII|     your goods - if ye were to hear that ruffians were throttling
22   XII|       that name, our sons will hear more, and our grandsons
23   XII|       cedar-trees, where I may hear no other sound but the cooing
24   XII| receive high office, I came to hear war proclaimed."~ ~The Grand
Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (VA2) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2010. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License