Chapter

1     I|        there in the khans of the foreign merchants and a few minarets,
2     I|        overtake a man in a large foreign city which he visits for
3   III|       most wondrous wise, from a foreign butcher whom he had welcomed
4   III|       the host, the war, and the foreign[Pg 58] ambassadors - and
5    IV|   pursuing to the death, even in foreign lands, hit, at last, upon
6    XI|     already see the tents of the foreign hosts pitched on the Tsiragan
7    XI| watch-towers the approach of the foreign war-ships.~ ~"But this shall
8   XII|         armies were sent against foreign powers as he directed, princes
9   XII|          the council-chambers of foreign nations to settle matters
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