Chapter

 1     I|           that these were the very things he had noticed in the room
 2     I| circumstances. God help you in all things!~ ~"Your grateful servant,~ ~"
 3    II|           such a large amount. The things he really desired were far,
 4   III|      besides, he delighted in such things. Nothing made him so happy
 5   III|       Prophet to permit marvellous things to happen. Suddenly Shah
 6    IV|        first of all promise me two things. The first is, that you
 7    IV|            tell them such a lot of things - things wondrous, unheard
 8    IV|        them such a lot of things - things wondrous, unheard of, of
 9    IV|           not the meaning of these things. She knew not what they
10    IV|            told her that all these things should be hers if only she
11   VII|            would not hurt the poor things if possible. Many of them
12  VIII|          villainy or other - these things were premonitions of evil
13    XI|             And I wrote down those things which the Prophet said to
14    XI|           compelled to write other things in place thereof!~ ~But
15    XI|        rivers, and at the last all things perish before the Mahdi;
16    XI|         know, no figures of living things should appear on the coins
17    XI|      belonging to the old order of things must remain among us. Write
18   XII|         one day be called to great things."~ ~Human calculations,
19   XII|       perpetually prophesying evil things.~ ~"If only you could bring
20   XII|            books which mock at the things which are written in the
21   XII|         the Etmeidan.~ ~In Stambul things were all topsy-turvy once
22   Sel|            is a storehouse of good things said by men noted for the
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