Chapter

 1     I|       poorer folks who have no gardens plant flowers on their house-tops,
 2     I|  forwards through all kinds of gardens and rookeries, Halil Patrona
 3   III|      of both and to spare. His gardens were more splendid than
 4   III|    were more splendid than the gardens of Soliman the Magnificent,
 5   III|     cars, and there were three gardens there, the flowers whereof
 6   III| Seraglio, along with the sugar gardens I have already spoken of.
 7   III|      illumination thereof. The gardens of the puspáng-trees and
 8   III|  tulips. Waving palm-trees and gardens full of sugar-flowers traversed
 9   III|     Bostanjik, hastened to the gardens of the grove of puspáng-trees
10    XI|    enemies. Our great men grow gardens in their palaces; they pass
11   XII|       descend with me into the gardens where we may settle[Pg 255]
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