Chapter

 1     I|          to recognise anybody as standing higher than himself. And
 2   III|       There were three pavilions standing side by side: the first
 3    IV|      threshold.~ ~Gül-Bejáze was standing by the fire-place getting
 4    IV|         father, she knew it, was standing outside his door and asking
 5    IV|            I fancy I can see him standing before me now!"~ ~"The Moor
 6     V|         group of Janissaries was standing round their kettle, which
 7     V|         three magnificent clocks standing in the room, one beside
 8    VI|       seventeen Janissaries were standing in front of the mosque of
 9    VI|        It was just as if a still standing lake had been stirred violently
10    VI| father-in-law. There he remained standing in the doorway as if he
11  VIII|      Beshir, the Kizlar-Aga, was standing before him with a long MS.
12  VIII|       cart drawn by two oxen was standing there, and the top of it
13    IX|         the pavement he remained standing by the side of the throne,
14    IX|    Mantle of the Prophet. There, standing in front of the throne,
15    IX|         to her as if someone was standing behind her back, sobbing
16    XI|          twenty splendid kiosks, standing beside the Sweet Waters,
17   XII|       that Kaplan Giraj remained standing in front of Halil paralyzed
18   XII|          not know whether he was standing on his head or his heels.
19   XII|     abandoned[Pg 261] wife still standing on the shore with her child
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