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Maurus Jókai Halil the Pedlar Concordances (Hapax - words occurring once) |
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3001 XII | them quantities of the most savoury food, which they washed 3002 III | record everything that thou sayest for an eternal remembrance."~ ~ 3003 XI | splendid flowers contain dark sayings. Let us listen:~ ~"Takimi 3004 XII | sword back again into its scabbard. All the Janissary officers 3005 I | Turk; "you will find but scanty cheer with me, for I am 3006 I | block up the whole street, scare out of their way all whom 3007 V | green tents for the viziers, scarlet tents for the kiayaks, dark 3008 IV | face to be all seamed and scarred like half-frozen water, 3009 Sel | ESMÈ STUART.~ ~HARUM SCARUM. (41)~ ~MRS. A. PHILLIPS.~ ~ 3010 II | were none of those pathetic scenes which poets and romance 3011 Sel | Richard Garnett, in his scholarly introduction demands, should 3012 VIII | magistrate. Ibrahim, a whilom schoolmaster, who went by the name of " 3013 IV | cellar full of scorpions and scolopendras, or in the Tower of Surem, 3014 V | There was such a malicious scorn in his gaze[Pg 113] that 3015 V | turned round and with a scornful Ha, ha, ha! began hurling 3016 IX | Paradise that would be," scornfully observed Orli, who, despite 3017 IV | night in a cellar full of scorpions and scolopendras, or in 3018 Sel | TRAVAIL OF HIS SOUL. (58)~ ~SCOTT GRAHAM.~ ~A BOLT FROM THE 3019 III | Vizier, nor the thongs of the scourge of the Sultana Asseki, nor 3020 XI | not,' their bodies will be scourged by the angels with iron 3021 I | own blood, and[Pg 34] then scrawled the names upon the wall 3022 X | Make way for the Sultana!" screamed the Kadun-Kiet-Khuda, who 3023 VI | streaming down their backs rush screaming away. Only Gül-Bejáze still 3024 X | believe that those wails and screams did not form part and parcel 3025 XII | high golden trellis-work screen, behind whose curtains it 3026 XI | Governor of Scutari and scribe of the Palace, having accomplished 3027 IV | degree. Wash[Pg 78] and scrub them as he might, the resin 3028 II | and yet Mussulmans did not scruple to put the filth into their 3029 II | alone had the courage to scrutinise the slave-girl carefully.~ ~ 3030 I | Pelivan.~ ~He hurried and scurried about till late in the evening 3031 II | she should be treated so scurvily?"~ ~"Halil Patrona!" answered 3032 V | looked like hundred-eyed sea-monsters swimming with hundreds of 3033 VIII | sword that Halil was now sealing all the public documents 3034 VIII | arrives to demand from me the seals of office, till then I must 3035 IV | liked her face to be all seamed and scarred like half-frozen 3036 IV | Ah, 'tis thou, musafir! I searched for you everywhere for two 3037 VI | disembarked there at his seaside palace with his viziers, 3038 XII | never budged from their seats, and not one of them drew 3039 IX | Empire, the viziers, the secretaries, the presenters of petitions 3040 XII | girdle a dagger which he had secreted there, and hurled it with 3041 XI(5) | The first section of the Koran.~ ~ 3042 IV | mule are strung two jars seemingly filled with dried dates. 3043 | seems 3044 XI | with the inspiration of a seer, addressed the men before 3045 VI | his whispered words, he sees a white mass, huddled in 3046 VIII | Medina, Mustafa Effendi, and Segban Pasha.~ ~"Ye see a dead 3047 VIII | from amongst themselves Seid Mohammed and Damadzadi, 3048 Sel | SELECTIONS FROM~ JARROLD & SONS'~ LIST 3049 IV | All these victims were self-confident slave-girls, who had been 3050 V | still drunk. With desperate self-forgetfulness he had been drinking the 3051 VII | before him, and with proud self-satisfaction the Kapudan Pasha saw how 3052 VI | with thy heart, and that selfsame puffed-up Sultana who has 3053 III | cloth of silver, with round selmiks on their heads, and embellished 3054 Sel | The Rejuvenation of Miss Semaphore. (Thirtieth Thousand.)~ ~ 3055 XII | to be called Ferhád, or Sender, as so many of the children 3056 IV | present to see them, for the senseless damsel on the floor might 3057 VII | only be brought to their senses by force of arms," he said 3058 XI | hearts of all present. Every sentence alluded to the most weighty 3059 V | him come hither!"~ ~This sentiment was greeted with an approving 3060 V | manner of[Pg 121] fantastic sentiments. Faith, hope, and love, 3061 IX | every door armed resplendent sentries made way before him, closing 3062 Int | frequently been published separately. The second part of "A Janicsárok 3063 III | who dries them again, the Serbedji-Bashi who has a pleasant potion 3064 XI | was not yet sufficiently serene for such acts of daring. 3065 XI | Halil Patrona's nominations seriatim.~ ~The Grand Vizier approved 3066 III | the Indian jugglers and serpent charmers, after whom came 3067 VII | live in it henceforth but serpents and bats and your accursed 3068 IX | the usual reward for such services - a shameful death awaits 3069 X | kept in rigorous, joyless servitude for twenty years, and then 3070 XII | a fresh plot.~ ~ ~ ~The session of the Divan was fixed for 3071 XII | deputies arrived; there were seven-[Pg 248]and-twenty of them, 3072 XI | nine-and-twenty gates of the seven-hilled city.~ ~"Lo! this did the 3073 | several 3074 VIII | before the Sulali, and with a severe and motionless countenance 3075 XII | abroad saw eight-and-thirty severed heads stuck on the ends 3076 IV | that Sultana deserves to be sewn up in a leather sack and 3077 VIII | of the Prince of Princes, Shahs, Khans, and Deys, the dominator 3078 VI | brethren are sent to the shambles, we hear their cries, we 3079 XIII | the little hut so full of shamefaced joy, looking behind her 3080 IV | odalisks admired their own shapely limbs. Hundreds and hundreds 3081 I | Janissary for my sake, you shared your dwelling with me, you 3082 V | would like their heels well shaved in default of heads."~ ~ 3083 III | body, the Berber-Bashi who shaves his head, the Ibrikdar Aga 3084 XII | the ten[Pg 269] thousand shebejis, bostanjis, and baltajis 3085 IV | Janaki. You have never shed any blood but the blood 3086 XI | when the tinkling of the sheep-bells[Pg 224] will be heard on 3087 Sel | finished with regret." - Sheffield Independent.~ ~Memory Street.~ ~ 3088 IX | that the blossoms of the Sheik-ul-Islam and the descendants of the 3089 I | dishes, a jug on a wooden shelf, and a couple of very simple 3090 XI | pearls, and the Tuba-tree shields the faithful from the heat 3091 I | Greek had been perpetually shifting his position, and consequently 3092 III | jacinth-hued background shine forth the more lustrous 3093 XII | said it," replied Halil, shipping the oars, for the rising 3094 I | herculean fellow, with his shirt-sleeves rolled up to his shoulders, 3095 IV | not a sign of life, not a shiver did she give. Then they 3096 X | Sultana felt a feeling of shivering awe, and began to withdraw[ 3097 XI | his arm felt an electric shock. What could it mean?~ ~But 3098 VII | and poked their gold-green shoots out of their well-warmed, 3099 VII | hanged up in front of his own shop-door!"~ ~The shopkeepers, full 3100 VII | and noses? Open all your shop-doors this instant, I say! for 3101 III | after the girl. The worthy shopkeeper took the maiden home with 3102 VII | his own shop-door!"~ ~The shopkeepers, full of terror, began to 3103 XII | He would have been very short-sighted not to have perceived that 3104 I | so inextricably, that the shortest way to everybody's house 3105 I | and porters, whose long shoulder-poles block up the whole street, 3106 I | the narrow streets; the shouting water-carriers and porters, 3107 IX | he seemed enveloped in a shower of pearls and diamonds. 3108 VIII | responded to their crying with showers of stones.~ ~The Green Banner 3109 VII | him and restore order by showing themselves to the rioters, 3110 XII | to his daughter on a tiny shred of vellum, and tied the 3111 IV | silence would be broken by a shriek from the secret dungeon 3112 VI | of women, like a swarm of shrieking ghosts, fluttered through 3113 VII | the Kapudan Pasha simply shrugged his shoulders. What an idea! 3114 VIII | told him everything with a shudder. At her husband's feet, 3115 VIII | that?"~ ~Gül-Bejáze, all shuddering, lisped the name of Abdi 3116 Sel | A tale of the Great Siberian Steppe. By Marya Rodziewicz. 3117 XII | may henceforth be named Sichian." 18~ ~Even had nothing 3118 X | them she had cared for in sickness, others she had comforted 3119 II | when it speaks, when it sighs, when it trembles with sweet 3120 VIII | the confirmation of thy signature."~ ~"What do they require?" 3121 VIII | and kissing the document signed by the Sultan, handed it 3122 VIII | before.~ ~It was with the signet in the hilt of this sword 3123 XII | from us? Of a truth the signification of that prophecy is this: 3124 VIII | greatest danger, for it signifies that the time has come for 3125 XI | not know this writing; its signs are quite strange to her, 3126 XII | s cold collected bearing silenced, disarmed his enemies. The 3127 Sel | CHEVASNEY. (16)~ BETWEEN THE SILENCES. (17)~ A RECORD OF DISCORDS. ( 3128 IX | mosque, in order that the Silihdars may gird thee with the Sword 3129 XI | Osman has strutted about in silk and velvet it has become 3130 XII | world. I was not born in silks and purples but in the love 3131 IV | Wherefore do you weep? How silly of you! Why, you know, of 3132 V | accompany their messages with similar little douceurs.~ ~Pelivan 3133 XI | that you have kissed the sin-remitting black stone, that you have 3134 II | thick, she can dance and sing, and do all manner of woman' 3135 V | Yea, and the songs of the singing-girls grow dumb before it."~ ~" 3136 V | Ali Kermesh, killed him single-handed. Nobody helped me to do 3137 Sel | metropolis is described with singular fidelity.~ ~Carpathia Knox. ( 3138 VI | discover in the midst of this sink of vileness and iniquity! 3139 XI | taller than his brethren is a sinner. Let us raise up those who 3140 Sel | the "Prodigal's Brother," "Sinners Twain," etc. With a special 3141 XI | us if we believe that the sins which will ruin the nation 3142 IV | kissing her husband and sipping from the beaker extended 3143 Sel | Some delightfully grotesque situations. The humour of the book 3144 I | voice. He was an enormous, six-foot high, herculean fellow, 3145 XII | thousand Janissaries and the sixteen thousand Topadshis in the 3146 XII | Janissary officers were sixty in number.~ ~Kabakulak beckoned 3147 Sel | that it is impossible to skip one page, or to lay down 3148 IV | pastry-cook's while Musli skipped homewards and brought with 3149 IV | his fist so heavily on the skull of the Berber-Bashi that 3150 II | serve, who listened to the slang of the auctioneer with absolute 3151 IV | once the price which the slave-merchant demanded, and forthwith 3152 IV | handed Irene over to the slave-women of the Seraglio, who immediately 3153 IX | preferred eternal loveless slavery to the favours of the new 3154 VII | negociations there was some slight difference of detail between 3155 VI | lowest depths, and all the slimy monsters and hideous refuse 3156 III | spectators with a display of slinging. Then came the wine-carriers 3157 VII | crab-catchers, pitchy-fingered slipper-botchers, huddling opium-eaters, 3158 IV | devoting himself to the art of slipper-stitching. This man often beheld Halil 3159 XII | eels of the Bosphorus, it slips from your grasp just as 3160 IV | Then they held her over a slow fire on a gridiron - she 3161 I | concussion of his fall, slumbered off where he lay, while 3162 IV | slave-girl half awoke from her slumbers, he would beckon to her 3163 XI | deny him.~ ~Now Musli was a sly dog. He knew very well that 3164 IV | truly!" observed Musli, smacking his lips; "what a pity there 3165 V | the Spahis, the finest, smartest horsemen of the whole host; 3166 V | a glass-maker, and there smashed to atoms an incalculable 3167 I | delicacies, at the sight and smell of which Janaki began to 3168 III | still more radiant with smiles. He signified to the Khas-Oda-Bashi 3169 X | love me, then, that thou smilest when I weep? Ought not blood 3170 IX | Pg 194]ever hath left the smith's hand can boast that I 3171 IV | By Allah!" cried Halil, smiting the table with his heavy 3172 III | Padishah felt his whole heart smitten with sweet lightnings, and 3173 II | her face, and when Halil smoothed it aside from the fair countenance 3174 III | was whiter than ivory and smoother than velvet. Compared with 3175 VIII | splendid palace.~ ~Halil smooths away the luxuriant locks 3176 XII | moment they were digging the snare for him into which he was 3177 VII | worthless vagabonds, ye filthy sneak-thieves, mud-larking crab-catchers, 3178 VII | with a voice resembling a sob:~ ~"Poor, poor Sultan!"~ ~ 3179 XII | Halil to the Khan with cold sobriety - "I am well aware what 3180 XIII | everything and avoids all society, for now Halil is expecting 3181 XI | Stambul the judgment of Sodom and Gomorrah. It is from 3182 I | of the all-dominating Aja Sofia mosque, which looks right[ 3183 VIII | thirty piastres to every soldier who hastened to range himself 3184 VI | intelligence that a number of soldiers were coming along from the 3185 Int | refuge among the mercenary soldiery of the Empire. The rebellion 3186 VI | was therefore kept as a solemn day of mourning, and a general 3187 III | splendid than the gardens of Soliman the Magnificent, and that 3188 IV | something above his head, when somebody who had approached him so 3189 Sel | A NEW OTHELLO. (4)~ ~SOMERVILLE GIBNEY.~ ~THE MAID OF LONDON 3190 XII | anxiety made him more and more somnolent as he grew older.~ ~But 3191 I | loud-sounding note of a song, bawled by someone coming 3192 XI | water that has fallen upon soot; for the treasures, palaces, 3193 IX | breast and in whose arms he soothed himself with dreams of glory, 3194 IX | pleasure - the Kizlar-Aga whose sooty face seemed to cast a black 3195 I | where the poorest and most sordid classes of the populace 3196 XI | city, and it grieved him sorely that nowhere could he perceive 3197 II | would never have any of this soul-benumbing stuff in his shop, and whenever 3198 II | murmured to herself - it sounded like a gentle long-drawn-out 3199 XII | towards the East and the South, but especially towards 3200 XI | descended, the glow of the southern sky grew ever paler on the 3201 I | hairs to serve him as a souvenir. Pelivan, overpowered by 3202 XII | stood at the very apex of sovereignty, whence the course of empires, 3203 XII | Patrona. All around sat the Spahi and Janissary officers with 3204 VIII | to what Sulali said about sparing Ibrahim's grey beard.~ ~" 3205 IX | it, and it only needs a spark no bigger than that which 3206 XI | sun was about to set. It sparkled on the watery mirror of 3207 XI | nearer to him, and making a speaking-trumpet out of his hands, bawled 3208 II | that mouth be like when it speaks, when it sighs, when it 3209 XII | heads stuck on the ends of spears over the central[Pg 267] 3210 XIII | of the woman's mind - a species of dumb monomania which 3211 V | that if he finds this one specimen too little, the Army is 3212 VI | was no great lover of such spectacles, so he hastily exchanged 3213 IX | way through monsters and spectres, or art thou wearied of 3214 IV | with him as the pirate-ship sped swiftly away with her, and 3215 III | of thy merits demands the speedy consummation of these espousals. 3216 Sel | LONDON BRIDGE. (5)~ ~T. W. SPEIGHT.~ ~THE HEART OF A MYSTERY. ( 3217 IX | curse - a dumb, overpowering spell, which left it to God and 3218 IV | light smoke of ambergris and spices which the damsels blew forth 3219 IX | very atmosphere and the spider crawling down the wall is 3220 IV | fragrant with ambergris and spikenard, and gave her fiery potions 3221 VII | millennial deposits of cedar-tree spines, antelope manure, so heating 3222 X | bailarina is almost tame and spiritless.[Pg 208]~ ~Suddenly one 3223 IX | cock of the fairy tale who spitted and roasted himself."~ ~" 3224 IV | by the sound of something splashing into the water, and regularly, 3225 IX | multiplied the extravagant splendours of the stately room.~ ~Around 3226 XI | another the treasures and the spoils of the unbelievers.~ ~"And 3227 IV | rose-water ascended into the air sporting with the golden balls.[Pg 3228 VIII | At these words Achmed sprang from the divan like a lion 3229 V | a maze of huge masts and spreading sails, and a thousand variegated 3230 I | them and guided them to the springs of the oasis - so that the 3231 V | intone the surem, but he spun it out so long and made 3232 VII | Abdi gave his horse the spur and galloped through the 3233 VII | this proclamation, then he spurred his horse upon the crier, 3234 XII | Porcelain Chamber, made them squat down on the precious carpets, 3235 I | hands the giant's throat, he squeezed it so tightly that in a 3236 I | let the latter pass, by squeezing himself against the wall, 3237 IV | have been born humpbacked, squinting, swarthy; she would have 3238 VIII | languidly it drooped upon its staff.~ ~The unfurling of the 3239 I | seconds the Janissary began to stagger to and fro, finally falling 3240 I | Janissary with all his might, staggering from one side of the lane 3241 X | after these tears could she stammer:~ ~"This is the curse of 3242 IV | master; they could be heard stamping about around the door.~ ~" 3243 V | manes of thy horse-tail standards flutter before thee on the 3244 X | bringing them suddenly to a standstill.~ ~"Look, look!" she cried, " 3245 XI | soil whereof is of pure starch, ambergris, musk, and saffron. 3246 II | square there for everybody to stare at her."~ ~"Impossible!" 3247 IV | of all they extended her stark naked on the icy-cold marble 3248 I | Hisar stand out against the starry heaven; and excepting the 3249 Int | romantic, and ever delights in startling contrasts. On the other 3250 VII | it so that it might keep steady when carried.~ ~"What dost 3251 Sel | Jókai. Translated by F. Steinitz (under the author's personal 3252 Sel | tale of the Great Siberian Steppe. By Marya Rodziewicz. Translated 3253 IV | was so deep, gruff, and stern, that those who heard it 3254 I | pepper-cakes filled with nuts and stewed in honey, and all manner 3255 I | been beaten with wooden sticks on a wooden board, when 3256 III | shame, suddenly becomes stiff and dead at the contact 3257 XII | rising evening breeze had stiffened out the sail and the little 3258 IX | for a few moments he stood stiffly, with his hands raised towards 3259 IX | dreams of glory, while she stifled his anxieties with her kisses.~ ~ 3260 VI | Gül-Bejáze!" he moans with a stifling voice, looking all around 3261 X | and suddenly, amidst the stillness of that dumb moment, from 3262 V | Golden Horn. Young and old stimulate each other with looks of 3263 VII | antelope manure, so heating and stimulating to vegetation, that wherever 3264 IV | once quaked beneath the stings of the poisonous insects. 3265 Sel | DRAYCOTT. (1)~ GEOFFREY STIRLING. (2)~ BONNIE KATE. (3)~ 3266 V | removed his foot from the stirrup in which he had dreamily 3267 XI | Rechenbtar Aga, the Sultan's Stirrup-holder; up, up, and do your duty. 3268 VII | direction.~ ~Rising in his stirrups, Abdi addressed them with 3269 XI | seemed to have suddenly gone stone-deaf, and had every single word 3270 X | a woodcutter, that one a stone-mason, that other one a fisherman. 3271 I | cellar, if only I may escape stopping in the streets all night, 3272 Sel | charm. The collection is a storehouse of good things said by men 3273 IV | whisper that she had been strangled during the night. And oftentimes 3274 VIII | compelled her to resort to the stratagem of the death-swoon, and 3275 V | very well, nor do I care a straw that it is so. I am not 3276 IX | because of the variegated straw-mats with which it is usually 3277 I | to go there, but to avoid straying into it. I am a stranger 3278 VII | liver-colour, and a bright yellow streak of colour ran parallel with 3279 II | the girl's long black hair streamed over her face, and when 3280 X | condescend to look at her.~ ~"Ye street-sweepings!" exclaimed Adsalis passionately, " 3281 XII | he directed, princes were strengthened on their thrones because 3282 I | just bought me a yataghan. Stretch forth thy neck! I would 3283 VI | of rest was a season of strict observance. The Aga of the 3284 VI | to Stambul. Each of them strictly observed the day - in his 3285 VIII | understands to twist the string? Come, come, fear nothing, 3286 VII | parallel with every single stripe. On the outside the green 3287 I | Halil took the precaution of stripping off his own kaftan beforehand 3288 XI | with never a thought of striving against the Powers of Omnipotence 3289 XII | their eyes before the fatal stroke descended.~ ~Six-and-twenty 3290 X | my eyes?"~ ~Mahmud gently stroked the head of the Sultana 3291 IV | know," said Gül-Bejáze, stroking mockingly the chin of worthy 3292 I | long.~ ~Next day he again strolled about the bazaars, and then 3293 Sel | Must take rank amongst our stronger and more original fiction." - 3294 IV | the back of that mule are strung two jars seemingly filled 3295 XI | the nation of Osman has strutted about in silk and velvet 3296 Sel | GOLDEN MILESTONE. (19)~ ~ESMÈ STUART.~ ~HARUM SCARUM. (41)~ ~ 3297 IX | bound in black velvet and studded with rose brilliants. Another 3298 Sel | exciting incidents and masterly studies of character." - Court Circular.~ ~" 3299 VII | drowned the voices of a few stump-orators who here and there had climbed 3300 IV | censed her all around with stupefying perfumes, bathed her in 3301 IV | the girl who could not be subdued by torture, nor the blandishments 3302 XI | himself against the future, submissive as he is to the decrees 3303 IV | one direction, through a subterranean cellar, whilst Halil fled 3304 Int | unexpectedly, amazingly successful. The Sultan, after vainly 3305 Sel | following on incident in rapid succession." - Daily Chronicle.~ ~Judy 3306 III | and larger during three successive months, and all the time 3307 I | this: which of the four successors of the Prophet, Ali, Abu 3308 X | sweetmeats, honey-cakes, and such-like delicacies, to which women 3309 IX | into the den of a lioness suckling her young; and thou wouldst 3310 VI | the light of day when a sudden concussion drives them to 3311 VII | Twas they who had brought suffering upon Gül-Bejáze.~ ~The viziers 3312 VIII | roll in the dust. Let it suffice him if they are deprived 3313 III | palm-trees and gardens full of sugar-flowers traversed the streets, and 3314 IV | sugar, and covered with sugar-fruit of every shape and hue, 3315 XI | Sultan venture to make a suggestion. They had better not be 3316 XI | was hard of hearing, which suited Musli exactly, as he had, 3317 IX | adventure thyself in the sulphur holes of Balsorah, or cause 3318 XIII | evening ascends the highest summit of the hills surrounding 3319 VII | had snow fetched from the summits of the Caucasus, where it 3320 V | voices. "Who ever heard of summoning a Janissary away from his 3321 VIII | house, and at the first summons he appeared in the Seraglio. 3322 Sel | literatures of Europe."~ ~Sunday Times -~ ~"Dr. Reich has 3323 XI | beginning at the time of sundown.~ ~"Allah give his blessing 3324 VI | still flickered in their sunken eyes. Alas! what pestilence 3325 I | follow the tenets of the Sunna.~ ~Much blood, much money, 3326 VI | Early in the morning, at sunrise, seventeen Janissaries were 3327 Sel | most exciting interests and superb descriptions." - Athenæum.~ ~ 3328 V | in him degenerated into superstition, frivolity, and voluptuousness - 3329 III | sit down beside him. He supped in her company. Then he 3330 V | Bosniaks were cooking their suppers, scattering the hot ashes 3331 V | surem, by the way, is a holy supplication which it is usual for the 3332 III | Sultana Asseki, nor the supplications of the White Prince, can 3333 XII | drunken moreover, Pelivan supplied them with as much opium 3334 Sel | small merit and ability. It supplies a long-felt want. Dr. Reich 3335 XII | threatened, would warmly support his proposition. All the 3336 IV | shone upon the pillars which supported the room - lamps of manifold 3337 VII | of need he may hasten to suppress the insurgents. Let the 3338 IV | that this was a mark of supreme condescension. During the 3339 III | great festivals, and the surest way of gaining his good 3340 V | any rate, the Padishah is surfeited with so many feasts and 3341 VII | perceived a great multitude surging around it, and amongst them 3342 X | THE FEAST OF HALWET.~ ~The surgujal - the turban with the triple 3343 Sel | sympathetic imagination not surpassed by any living novelist. 3344 XI | take the Grand Vizier by surprise, that before he could find 3345 Sel | richness and humour of its surprises, 'Eyes Like the Sea' ranks 3346 X | them in the same dungeon, surround her, begin to kiss her feet 3347 XIII | highest summit of the hills surrounding her little hut and gazes 3348 XII | Grand Vizier and the Khan surveyed the ranks of the Janissary 3349 XII | long, and I don't want to survive you. You will see me die, 3350 XII | there and then.~ ~Only three survived the day, Sulali, Mohammed 3351 VI | themselves were the sole survivors of the carnage - that was 3352 Sel | Edmund H. Garrett. 6/=~ ~"Susanna is a splendid study. No 3353 VIII | from which it might be suspected that the army had broken 3354 I | position, and consequently suspecting that he was little used 3355 Sel | the love interest is fully sustained." - Gentlewoman.~ ~Anima 3356 XI | booty that will give them sustenance; tender women lay their 3357 XII | has grown big enough to swallow us up when we are now strong 3358 XI | after another, for if he swallowed the first of them that was 3359 XI | might be hoodwinked into swallowing the rest likewise.~ ~The 3360 XI | drooping, whilst with her swan-like arms she encircled his neck. 3361 VI | a mob of women, like a swarm of shrieking ghosts, fluttered 3362 IV | born humpbacked, squinting, swarthy; she would have liked her 3363 XII | may be so long as you hold sway in your own domain, and 3364 XI | Mussulman. Neither Russia, nor Sweden, nor yet Poland pay tribute 3365 IV | down to the sea-shore, and sweep the smooth shining watery 3366 VIII | forward the first basket and sweeps away the flowers. A bloody 3367 III | jocosely tapped the red swelling cheeks of his faithful servant - 3368 XI | and the corsairs of the swift ships will share with one 3369 XII | pinions, and then, with the swiftness and directness of a well-aimed 3370 II | thought his brain began to swim for joy and rapture.~ ~And 3371 V | hundred-eyed sea-monsters swimming with hundreds of legs on 3372 VII | huddling opium-eaters, swindling knacker-sellers, petty hucksters, 3373 I | domusz!" ("Not so fast, thou swine!") "a word in thine ear! 3374 IV | dancing all around her and swinging censers. Above her head 3375 III | her from her death-like swoon."~ ~"And didst thou discover 3376 IV | embraces. In vain. The girl swooned at the very first touch, 3377 XI | Silihdar Aga, the Sultan's Sword-bearer! Up, up, Rechenbtar Aga, 3378 IX | hand the diamond clasp, the symbol of dominion, and with his 3379 VII | leaves, with yellow edges, symbolized, perhaps, the fifteen hundred 3380 XI | religious and political system, so they could but put their 3381 XI(9) | Tablets indicating the direction 3382 VII | other, for cobblers and tailors cannot write of course. 3383 X | their faces to the horses' tails.~ ~Suddenly the Sultana 3384 VII | in the Dead Moun[Pg 135]tains. A judicious intermingling 3385 III | uttering certain magical talismanic words of evil portent, from 3386 XII | woman dost not believe in talismans? My talisman is my heart, 3387 XIII | and then she whispers and talks to him so lovingly and so 3388 IV | she was now conducted. A tall, muscular lady was sitting 3389 XI | whoever is so much as a head taller than his brethren is a sinner. 3390 V | slave-girls, who seize their tambourines and mandolines, and weave 3391 IX | and the people waved rich tapestries at him from the house-tops 3392 III | him, the Sultan jocosely tapped the red swelling cheeks 3393 XIII | One day there came a tapping at her window. With joy 3394 VIII | demanded while still alive."~ ~"Tarry a while, I say, wait but 3395 III | Silihdar buckled on his tasselled sword, and then everyone, 3396 XII | patted their shoulders, tasted of their food, drank out 3397 I | that he might avoid."~ ~The tattoo had already been beaten 3398 I | already wrested from them Tauris, Erivan, Kermandzasahan, 3399 XII | among the ravines of Mount Taurus, which was scarce known 3400 IX | is the farming out of the taxes for the lives of the holders 3401 III | forward, and drying his tearful eyes with the corner of 3402 III | others, and thus relieve the tedium invariably attendant upon 3403 XI | nice stories which thou tellest me every evening?"~ ~"Yes, 3404 IX | go on an embassy to the tempest-tost sea and bandy words therewith?"~ ~ 3405 IX | 200] doors resounded the tempestuous roar of the multitudes assembled 3406 XI | Allah and yet allow His Temple to be defiled."~ ~These 3407 I | drawn deep down over his temples, obliterating his eyebrows 3408 I | would regard it as a sheer tempting of Providence to quit his 3409 IX | to the turn of his little ten-year-old child, Bajazid, he saw that 3410 V | say not so!" stammered the tender-hearted Sultan, pressing his gentle 3411 I | here are so narrow that the tendrils of the vines and gourds 3412 IV | our escape to the Isle of Tenedos and there await tidings 3413 I | realm of Barbary follow the tenets of the Sunna.~ ~Much blood, 3414 V | corners of the streets in tens and twenties, and tell each 3415 XII | inquired Kabakulak at last tentatively.~ ~They were all silent.~ ~" 3416 VII | regiment by regiment and every tenth man of them shot through 3417 XI | olive, the lestisk, the terebinth, and the palm lift their 3418 VIII | thanked Allah for setting a term to the life of man.~ ~ ~ ~[ 3419 IV | his ears and grew[Pg 93] terribly attentive when mention was 3420 IX | Seraglio gates they set up a terrific shout.~ ~Alone, unarmed, 3421 I | Sunnites had invaded the territories of the Shiites. The redoubtable 3422 XII | to march through Russian territory in order to fall upon our 3423 IV | damsel lived amidst mortal terrors. Her companions envied her. 3424 VIII | whom he had appointed his teskeredjis.~ ~When the Janissaries 3425 I | forth thy neck! I would test my weapon upon thee and 3426 I | to know and observe that text of the Koran which says, " 3427 XI | and those who would attain thereto must strive and struggle 3428 I | with luxuriant grass and thick-foliaged cypresses, only the turbaned 3429 VII | and galloped through the thickest part of the mob, which dispersed 3430 IV | stranger may be a spy or a thief!"~ ~"What an idea!" Halil 3431 III | then, and gird upon thy thigh the sword of thy illustrious 3432 IV | idea.~ ~And through the thin iron shutters which covered 3433 V | mournful voice:~ ~"What thinkest thou? - if thy house was 3434 Sel | MARGARET MOULE.~ ~THE THIRTEENTH BRYDAIN. (34)~ ~ELEANOR 3435 Sel | Rejuvenation of Miss Semaphore. (Thirtieth Thousand.)~ ~A Farcical 3436 XII | apartment rushed Pelivan and the thirty-two Janissaries with drawn swords.~ ~ 3437 III | the Grand Vizier, nor the thongs of the scourge of the Sultana 3438 XI | was written in the Book of Thora before Sun and Moon were 3439 Sel | adventure, holding the reader in thrall; whilst the love interest 3440 IV | more, yet she could not thrash a soul into the lifeless 3441 IX | knew very well that such a threat as this never arose in the 3442 XI | shaking his clenched fist threateningly.~ ~"It was Uzun Abdi, the 3443 V | Divan, or council-chamber.~ ~Three-quarters of an hour later Izmail 3444 Sel | with great vividness, a thrilling story dramatically told. 3445 Sel | Athenæum.~ ~"Simply full of thrills from cover to cover." - 3446 Sel | Mathers, Author of "Comin' thro' the Rye." 3/6~ ~"It has 3447 XI | now and then, but the warm throb-throb of the strong heart which 3448 XII | were strengthened on their thrones because Halil Patrona wished 3449 XII | hear that ruffians were throttling your little children or 3450 IV | face; but then he would throw back his head again, and 3451 I | during his absence, and thrusting them both into his satchel 3452 XI | Abdestan, the Güzül, and the Thüharet ablutions, nor the five 3453 VIII | had been robbed of their thumbs by the savage cruelty of 3454 III | Prince Murad. In Gallipoli a thunder-bolt struck the powder-magazine, 3455 V | time, fierce shouts and thunderous murmurings arise from this 3456 VI | The following day was Thursday, the 28th September. On 3457 XIII | awakened him. Thy beard has tickled him, and he has opened his 3458 III | garment, the Dülbendar who ties the shawl round his body, 3459 X | arms. She sits upon the tiger-skin saddle of her haughty steed 3460 Sel | Gazette.~ ~[Pg 279]~ ~In Tight Places. (Third Edition.)~ ~ 3461 I | up the fragment of a red tile he wrote his name above 3462 VII | produce bread without being tilled, and that wine and coffee 3463 XII | Muscovite guns which drove our Timariots out of Kermanshan, and that 3464 X | they hold their nakaras (timbrels), clashing them together 3465 III | my realm!" - that was the tiniest of the flattering assurances 3466 XII | counsel?~ ~Halil stole on tip-toe to the bed of his wife who 3467 VII | ragged, filthy, whey-faced tipplers! - I, Abdi, the Kapudan 3468 IV | gingerly entered, on the tips of his toes, with his hands 3469 III | might have been thought a tiresome matter to listen to such 3470 IV | entered, on the tips of his toes, with his hands fumbling 3471 I | Accept, therefore, as a token of my gratitude, the slender 3472 I | well-built man, with a tolerably plump face, on which at 3473 XI | been buried with the double tombstone at our heads, on which is 3474 I | cypresses, only the turbaned tombstones show that here is the place 3475 V | occur to him: Am I a mere tool in the hands of my army, 3476 III | Padishah! suffer not the tooth of disaster to gnaw away 3477 XII | and the sixteen thousand Topadshis in the capital because they 3478 III | raised arabesques formed by topazes and dalmatines. Precious 3479 V | sea-front are ranged the topidjis, with their rows and rows 3480 VI | the murderers and flaming torches in the hands of the incendiaries, 3481 VIII | night long the Kizlar-Aga tormented Achmed[Pg 171] with the 3482 X | whirling along with them in a torrent of drunken enthusiasm everyone 3483 IV | that the damsel should be tortured. First of all they extended 3484 IV | made herself dead to all tortures."~ ~"At last they came to 3485 II | nonchalance as he circumstantially totted up their years and described 3486 VIII | satisfied."[Pg 159]~ ~With tottering footsteps the Kiaja stepped 3487 III | carefully dried them with a towel, the Ternakdji Bashi pared 3488 VIII | had heard mentioned by the town-crier along with that of Halil 3489 Sel | people of those curious towns and villages and lonely 3490 I | at that moment no small traces of fear could be detected 3491 II | them that Halil was no born trader. Yet he was perfectly satisfied 3492 II | for instance, the rich traders of Dirbend offer to the 3493 VII | assembled merchants and tradesmen. "I suppose your heels are 3494 II | space separated from the trading booths by lofty iron railings. 3495 XII | in the Seven Towers, and tradition says he died by poison.[ 3496 XII | whose curtains it is the traditional custom of the Sultan to 3497 VI | We are being ruined by traitors. Fugitives from the host 3498 VII | you see that you nearly trampled upon one of them!"~ ~"Oh, 3499 I | palaces, mirror themselves tranquilly. The long, winding, narrow 3500 XI | the fallen magnates are transferred to the new favourite, and 3501 IV | of a burning red like the transfigured rose whereon a drop of the 3502 V | was not[Pg 117] capable of translating it into action. Many, very 3503 VII | to him in which he might transplant the flowers, and he dug 3504 VII | heart, kept on watering the transplanted tulips till he had done 3505 III | garden. So Achmed, in a transport of enthusiasm, pressed the 3506 V | take ship at once - the transports are all ready - and hasten 3507 Sel | PHILPOT CROWTHER.~ ~THE TRAVAIL OF HIS SOUL. (58)~ ~SCOTT 3508 I | interesting tales to tell of travellers who had lost their way in 3509 IV | For if I were thrice to traverse the whole earth and go in 3510 III | gardens full of sugar-flowers traversed the streets, and galleys 3511 X | singing, this bevy of peris traverses the principal streets of 3512 I | reach his dwelling.~ ~After traversing a labyrinth of narrow, meandering 3513 Int | his chief associates were treacherously assassinated in full Divan 3514 XI(6) | The Imperial Treasury.~ ~ 3515 IV | knees, and implored him to treat all that the girl had said 3516 XII | chamber by a high golden trellis-work screen, behind whose curtains 3517 IV | this junketing through the trellised window, and could scarce 3518 II | when it sighs, when it trembles with sweet desire?"~ ~Halil 3519 I | certainly the possessor of a tremendous pair of lungs, for he could 3520 I | flavours there are in the onion tribe, far more, indeed, than 3521 XI | Sweden, nor yet Poland pay tribute to us; and yet, I say, these 3522 V | the top of a lofty iron tripod, and amongst them we notice 3523 X | who could have seen them tripping along in whole lines might 3524 IX | martial music, Mahmud held his triumphal progress through the streets 3525 I | fresh announcement of these triumphs, all the more vigorously 3526 III | the horses of the victor trod the rebel underfoot. And 3527 V | unintelligible.~ ~Meanwhile a troop of mounted ciauses was approaching 3528 I | all whom they meet; whole troops of dogs come forth from 3529 VII | here also Abdi succeeded in trotting through the ranks of the 3530 VII | Inhabitants of Stambul, true-believing Mussulmans, our commander 3531 XI | angel Izrafil might blow his trumpet in thine ear!" said Musli 3532 IX | proclaim to the people with a trumpet-blast at the gates of the Seraglio, 3533 VII | and amongst them a mounted trumpeter with one of those large 3534 VII | provocative tone.~ ~The trumpeting herald was thus addressing 3535 V | groups in its passage, and trundling rapidly away over some level 3536 IV | as rich a man as you are, trust me for finding a way of 3537 IV | Padishah bade Ali Kermesh, his trusty Berber-Bashi, make inquiries 3538 V | been captured as they were trying to fly, and the unbelieving 3539 VI | where he huddled into an old tub of a boat which carried 3540 XI | pebbles pure pearls, and the Tuba-tree shields the faithful from 3541 Int | oriental episode of the tulip-pots, are absolute facts. Naturally 3542 I | thick-foliaged cypresses, only the turbaned tombstones show that here 3543 I | the lands of the Shiites; Turkey, Arabia, Egypt, and the 3544 XII | once he opens his mouth he turns[Pg 257] every drawn sword 3545 III | jacket, the binis heavy with turquoise,[Pg 56] the Silihdar buckled 3546 I | noómát from the slender turrets of the mosques; everyone 3547 I | previously he had had his tussle with Halil Pelivan. He recognised 3548 V | Janissaries, together with the twelve-pound cannon-ball, at the same 3549 V | the streets in tens and twenties, and tell each other of 3550 VI | 126] his odalisks for the twentieth time at least; and the Kiaja 3551 Sel | By Charles Hannan. With twenty-three graphic Illustrations from 3552 I | figure and features in the twilight, seemed to be a strong, 3553 IX | piece of advice.[Pg 192]~ ~"'Twill be best," said he, "to gather 3554 VII | his sword.~ ~But now Musli twisted the pole round so that the 3555 XI | own. And in every palace two-and-seventy lovely houris will smile 3556 VII | Kiaja coming in a wretched, two-wheeled kibitka, with a Russian 3557 X | seems to proclaim her the tyrant of two Sultans, who has 3558 XI | ascended to the tower of Ujuk Kule, from whence I could 3559 XII | midst of Podolia and the Ukraine. He knew, and he only, what 3560 IX | letters of gold, cinnabar, and ultramarine; and there were twelve other 3561 Sel | Mall Gazette.~ ~St. Peter's Umbrella. (Third Edition.)~ ~By Kálmán 3562 IX | prythee, at the face of Ummettulah; look at the eyes of Sabiha, 3563 XII | doing so with which I am unacquainted. I, on the other hand, will 3564 IX | sonorous voice:~ ~"Aleikum unallah! The grace of God be upon 3565 IX | terrific shout.~ ~Alone, unarmed, and without an escort, 3566 IV | softly as to take him quite unawares, very affectionately greeted 3567 XI(12)| Unbeliever.~ ~ 3568 IX | Prophet to the Silihdar, who unbuckled it from his body, and when 3569 IX | never happen," said Halil, unbuckling his sword (for no weapon 3570 VIII | of this mat, and by the uncertain light of dawn they saw before 3571 IX | Mahmud did obeisance to his uncle, and seizing his hand, as 3572 I | detected and something of that uncomfortable hesitation which is apt 3573 VI | stroll about the streets with uncovered faces, who paint their eyebrows 3574 III | the victor trod the rebel underfoot. And now the restored sovereign 3575 XIII | capacity of judging and understanding, he hears his mother conversing 3576 XII | again in case anything was undertaken against them. Their requests 3577 V | are unlucky hours for any undertaking. The true Mussulman puts 3578 XI | Christian world; but he[Pg 239] undertook to dilapidate the walls 3579 XI | Sultan then and get him to undo again what he has done. 3580 IX | passed through the strange, unfamiliar rooms, and at every door 3581 I | obsequiousness he at once began unfastening his neck-cloth, whimpering 3582 III | quite indifferent to these unfortunate events, in fact, he did[ 3583 V | the banner of the Prophet unfurled; and so terrible were these 3584 VIII | drooped upon its staff.~ ~The unfurling of the Green Banner on the 3585 IV | receive her back from me unharmed by me. Take her away therefore!"~ ~" 3586 IV | things - things wondrous, unheard of, of which they had not 3587 XII | if Europe was absolutely uninhabited by any but ourselves, as 3588 V | fellow and making all he said unintelligible.~ ~Meanwhile a troop of 3589 Int | On the other hand, the unique episode of Gül-Bejáze, " 3590 VII | it were found possible to unite with Abdullah Pasha all 3591 XII | banded might in case of a war unjustly begun by us. All this comes 3592 III | excellence, and originality unknown to his predecessors. Adsalis 3593 V | hours of the afternoon are unlucky hours for any undertaking. 3594 VIII | pity to give worthy men unnecessary trouble, most glorious Sultan," 3595 III | from the mouth of thine unprofitable servant with those ears 3596 XI | are so many worthier men unprovided for. We want the Khan of 3597 VI | suddenly flooded by the unrecognised riff-raff which vegetates 3598 XII | the sky and now upon the unruffled surface of the watery mirror. 3599 VI | understand why they were so unruly after they had heard the 3600 VI | till, in the wake of these unspeakably vile women, his pure-souled 3601 IV | man left his slave-girl untouched, and the girl who could 3602 Int | authorities, has not been untrue to history though, as I 3603 Sel | stir and interest in an unusual degree." - Daily Chronicle.~ ~ 3604 III | have entertained him with unusually pleasant stories, or perchance 3605 II | have been told to do. I unveil this odalisk, I proclaim 3606 III | continued the Berber-Bashi, unwinding the pearl-embroidered kauk 3607 Sel | real to us that appalling upheaving of Nature." - Daily News.~ ~[ 3608 XI | whose power it once stood to uphold the dominion of Mahomet, 3609 X | gaping open as she gazed upwards.~ ~There at the window of 3610 I | set in; the mule-drivers urge on their beasts laden on 3611 X | flank of her steed, and urged it towards the spot where 3612 IX | from among us our least useful members - any murderers 3613 IX | straw-mats with which it is usually covered, was now spread 3614 IX | the hands of these rich usurers!"~ ~And with these words 3615 XII | of what they called his usurpation of authority. These men 3616 III | could not permit that a usurper should sit at his ease on 3617 X | towards Heaven and could not utter a word. Impotent rage forced 3618 XI | threateningly.~ ~"It was Uzun Abdi, the Aga of the Janissaries," 3619 V | CHAPTER V.~ ~THE CAMP.~ ~What a noise, 3620 VII | pacified crowd:~ ~"Ye worthless vagabonds, ye filthy sneak-thieves, 3621 XI | must strive and struggle valiantly for it in this life.[Pg 3622 II | the public crier. "As I value my head I must obey my orders, 3623 XIII | long zig-zag path which vanishes in the dim distance - will 3624 XI | Heaven it was on the point of vanishing. Thrice he was obliged to 3625 V | times with all sorts of variations.[Pg 111] He had described 3626 Sel | etc. 6/=~ ~"A lively and varied series of cosmopolitan crime, 3627 Sel | In wealth of incident, in variety and interest of characterisation, 3628 VII | hands, in the porcelain vase, and pressed the earth down 3629 VII | ordered that costly china vases should be brought to him 3630 IV | showed her there three great vats full of gold and precious 3631 VI | unrecognised riff-raff which vegetates in every great town, though 3632 VII | heating and stimulating to vegetation, that wherever it falls 3633 VII | rioters, whereupon the latter vehemently declared that not for all 3634 II | slave-market, leading by the hand a veiled female slave, and made the 3635 II | it so!" said the crier, veiling the maid anew; "you have 3636 XII | daughter on a tiny shred of vellum, and tied the letter beneath 3637 XI | Down from your perches, ye venal voivodes, khans, and pashas, 3638 Int | far as I am competent to verify his authorities, has not 3639 III | of the White Prince. For, verily, it is a joy to even behold 3640 III | Mufti, who read aloud a verse from the Koran in the light 3641 XII | though I am not so well versed in European customs as you 3642 III | knees for an audience in the vestibule of the Seraglio. They desired, 3643 IV | of Patrona dwelt Musli, a veteran Janissary, who filled up 3644 VI | CHAPTER VI.~ ~THE BURSTING FORTH OF 3645 VII | no doubt receive a rich viceroyalty, perhaps even Egypt, who 3646 IX | believed that he was seeking a victim whose place he coveted. 3647 III | hoofs of the horses of the victor trod the rebel underfoot. 3648 Int | the advancing hosts of the victorious Persians had revolted both 3649 Sel | by the Author.~ ~"Full of vigour ... his touches of humour 3650 VII | CHAPTER VII.~ ~TULIP-BULBS AND HUMAN 3651 VIII | CHAPTER VIII.~ ~A TOPSY-TURVY WORLD.~ ~ 3652 VI | the midst of this sink of vileness and iniquity! Speak those 3653 Sel | those curious towns and villages and lonely mountains, are 3654 VIII | master for some piece of villainy or other - these things 3655 I | which was embowered in vine leaves. There was certainly 3656 X | and ever denser and more violent grew the crowd. Any smaller 3657 III | first was white, the second violet, and the third of a vivid 3658 X | other beverages made of violets, cane-sugar, rose-water, 3659 XII | supposed to confer courage and virility. When they had well eaten 3660 III | the Vizier Ibrahim and the virtuous Küprili, the descendant 3661 III | to such long, drawn-out visions as this to the very end, 3662 I | piastres, so that if ever I visit you again I may find you 3663 I | large foreign city which he visits for the very first time.[ 3664 IV | sight of him, bawled him a vociferous welcome.~ ~"Nay, come along! 3665 XI | from your perches, ye venal voivodes, khans, and pashas, who 3666 VII | Stambul are not worth a volley, and, besides, I would not 3667 Int | published at Pest in three volumes in 1854. The two tales are, 3668 XI(15)| Voluntary almsgiving.~ ~ 3669 III | lightnings, and when her voluptuously enchanting lips expressed 3670 V | superstition, frivolity, and voluptuousness - already he was but half 3671 I | house till he has given me a voucher in writing for it, and whenever 3672 I | and with his host.~ ~I'll wager that Sultan Achmed, poor 3673 XII | Sultan distributed thirty wagon-loads of money among the forty 3674 X | and then, a short sharp wail or scream may be heard[Pg 3675 X | would believe that those wails and screams did not form 3676 VI | is waiting till, in the wake of these unspeakably vile 3677 III | slumber is a blessing, wary wakefulness is better than slumber, 3678 I | In the course of his wanderings, he suddenly came upon the 3679 V | of the realm, and kept in ward lest the virtue of his faithful 3680 Sel | Thousand.)~ ~By Florence Warden, Author of "The House on 3681 V | you when the banners of warfare are already waving before 3682 II | All the more reason for warming it on his lips and on his 3683 XII | nearly threatened, would warmly support his proposition. 3684 III | hand, and that neither the warmth of the sun-like face of 3685 VIII | against which they wished to warn me? Why, their blood would 3686 VIII | quiet them immediately, I warrant."~ ~As the Kizlar-Aga, Elhaj 3687 III | thine eye and a host of warriors will spring from the earth, 3688 X | who led the procession; a warty old woman she was, who had 3689 Sel | JARROLD & SONS, 10 & 11, WARWICK LANE, E.C.~ ~ ~ ~ 3690 III | though slumber is a blessing, wary wakefulness is better than 3691 III | head, the Ibrikdar Aga who washes his hands, the Peshkiriji 3692 Sel | atmosphere breathed by Byron and Washington Irving."~ ~Literature -~ ~" 3693 V | seemed as if he were bent on wasting time purposely. By the time 3694 VIII | of Scutari not a single watch-fire was visible, from which 3695 XI | will signal from their watch-towers the approach of the foreign 3696 VIII | answer after another. The watchers placed on the roof of the 3697 I | narrow streets; the shouting water-carriers and porters, whose long 3698 VII | with a merry heart, kept on watering the transplanted tulips 3699 VII | the burning city with this watering-can. The will of Allah be done!"[ 3700 Sel | Jókai. Translated by Mrs. Waugh. With a finely engraved 3701 V | after another at the bare wave of their hand, but there 3702 VIII | suddenly grew paler than a wax figure.~ ~"Such a faithful 3703 IV | The same instant the Greek wayfarer uttered a[Pg 75] loud cry, 3704 Sel | exciting." - Daily News.~ ~Wayfarers All. (Second Edition.)~ ~ 3705 IV | arms, at any rate, were no weaker than of yore.~ ~One day 3706 V | of my army, and why do I wear a sword at all if I do not 3707 IX | and spectres, or art thou wearied of beholding the sun from 3708 XII | and fall asleep from sheer weariness, for his anxiety made him 3709 IV | Sultan came to the Seraglio weary and inclined to relaxation, 3710 IV | with some girl friends. The weather was fine, the sea smooth, 3711 V | tambourines and mandolines, and weave the light dance around the 3712 Sel | with genuine pleasure." - Weekly Sun.~ ~The Winds of March. ( 3713 XII | held to her breast.~ ~"Why weepest thou?" asked Halil. "'Tis 3714 I | with knobs, and that it is weighted with lead besides. What 3715 XI | sentence alluded to the most weighty of the Moslem beliefs; the 3716 IV | bawled him a vociferous welcome.~ ~"Nay, come along! come 3717 III | foreign butcher whom he had welcomed to his house as a guest."~ ~" 3718 Sel | THEIR HEARTS. (47)~ ~HADLEY WELFORD.~ ~WHOSE DEED? (51)~ ~GEO. 3719 XII | swiftness and directness of a well-aimed dart, she flew straight 3720 X | hands, and their backs were well-belaboured with the broad blades. The 3721 I | seemed to be a strong, well-built man, with a tolerably plump 3722 VII | horn, and addressed some well-chosen remarks to the people assembled 3723 III | single grey hair in his well-kept, long black beard; it would 3724 XII | the chief plotters; the well-laid plot could not be carried 3725 IV | house of his neighbour, the well-mannered Janissary, who mended slippers. 3726 VII | out of their well-warmed, well-moistened bed.~ ~On the eve of the 3727 XII | followers.~ ~So it was a well-prepared trap into which Halil and 3728 X | the snowy shimmer of her well-rounded arms. She sits upon the 3729 IV | with him a small dish of well-seasoned pilaf and a few cups of 3730 I | see that the head of it is well-studded with knobs, and that it 3731 VII | gold-green shoots out of their well-warmed, well-moistened bed.~ ~On 3732 Sel | MAJOR NORRIS PAUL.~ ~EVELINE WELLWOOD. (6)~ ~MRS. BAGOT HARTE.~ ~ 3733 III | May the sun rise in the west if it be thy will, oh Padishah!" 3734 I | inhabitants, so different from our western cities, all paved and swept 3735 Int | as they seem to us sober Westerns, such incidents as the tame 3736 XI | could but stay the flying wheel of Fate in mid career, hold 3737 III | perambulated the piazzas on wheels. That dream was too lovely 3738 I | that I may discover her whereabouts and, if possible, ransom 3739 | whereas 3740 XII | star smiled down upon her wheresoever she gazed. The evening was 3741 | wherever 3742 VII | hucksters, ye ragged, filthy, whey-faced tipplers! - I, Abdi, the 3743 IX | of pearls and diamonds. Whichever way he turned the roses 3744 VIII | chief magistrate. Ibrahim, a whilom schoolmaster, who went by 3745 I | unfastening his neck-cloth, whimpering at the same time something 3746 IV | full of fury, seized a whip, and lashed away at the 3747 X | street they carried her, whirling along with them in a torrent 3748 II | And with these words he whisked away the veil from the head 3749 V | discharged twelve-pounder whistled about their heads and then 3750 IX | Padishah.~ ~His face was not a whit the paler than at other 3751 V | said he, "and all your white-headed grand viziers and grey-bearded 3752 XII | loftiest star of his hopes. Whithersoever I may one day rise, he would 3753 VIII | regarded her husband with eyes wide-open with astonishment, and then 3754 VIII | palace garden beneath three wide-spreading rosemary bushes.~ ~Then 3755 XI | opened his ears a little wider, became somewhat more gracious, 3756 IX | Ezma. They are all of them widows and orphans, and it is thou 3757 X | eunuchs occupied the whole width of the road, but face to 3758 XII | All Halil Patrona's wildest dreams had been realised. 3759 Sel | Portrait of Dr. Jókai.~ ~"It is wildly exciting - having once begun 3760 Sel | Louis Quinze in Quebec. By William Kirby, F.R.S.C. 6/=~ ~"Brimful 3761 IV | you a good turn. Are you willing to receive me into your 3762 Sel | Edited, with Notes, by Wilmot Harrison, Author of "Memorable 3763 III | slinging. Then came the wine-carriers with their wine-skins, and 3764 III | wine-carriers with their wine-skins, and in a pavilion set up 3765 III | another empire. It needs but a wink of thine eye and a host 3766 IX | boast that I have so much as winked an eye before its glittering 3767 XII | perceived its conquering sword winning fresh victories, and extending 3768 V | Can the rose blossom in winter-time? Do not its leaves fall 3769 IV | Pg 81] women!" said he, wiping the tears from his eyes 3770 III | Allah, in his inscrutable wisdom, to permit the Persian rebel, 3771 II | for hard cash," and they wisely withdrew into the interiors 3772 X | thyself, thou bearded old witch," she cried; "make way, 3773 VIII | asked the Sultan softly, withdrawing, as he spoke, a tiny knife 3774 V | was nobody who would have withheld thee from the path of peril!"~ ~ 3775 XII | will be our allies, if we withhold it they will become our 3776 IX | among them who could[Pg 198] withstand the fire of his gaze. With 3777 IV | head inside the door, and witnessing the scene would discreetly 3778 III | easy matter to lose one's wits because of her, especially 3779 III | more occasion for mourning. Woeful tidings, like dark clouds 3780 X | of women, when nobody but womankind is permitted to walk about 3781 III | blessings of prosperity to womenkind. Thou knowest what these 3782 I | Halil Patrona's house was of wood like the rest. It consisted 3783 XII | sound but the cooing of the wood-pigeon; let me pluck flowers on 3784 Sel | The Speaker.~ ~"His workmanship is admirable, and he possesses 3785 III | powder-magazine, and five hundred workmen were blown into the air. 3786 XI | mortal hand. Ambitious, world-disturbing were the thoughts which 3787 I | much opposition.~ ~"Thou worm! thou crossed-leg, crouching 3788 II | wrinkled old negresses, worn-out, venomous nurses, human 3789 XI | when we say that we [Pg 228]worship Allah and yet allow His 3790 II | close to him now.~ ~But the worst of it was that, even now, 3791 Sel | original Hungarian by W. B. Worswick. With Introduction by R. 3792 II | qualities, and allowed their would-be purchasers to examine their 3793 I | in a terrified whisper, "wouldn't[Pg 20] it be as well if 3794 XII | mutual hatred were enough to wound to the death.~ ~After the 3795 XII | Muhammad the most terrible wounds, and whose giant footsteps 3796 I | carrying in one hand a knapsack woven out of rushes. This he now 3797 I | of the gigantic city is wrapped in gloom.~ ~The muezzin 3798 XII | his heels. Kaplan Giraj wrathfully thrust his sword back again 3799 IX | hues, interspersed with wreaths of pearls. At the foot of[ 3800 I | Halil Pelivan - Halil the Wrestler!"~ ~"Mine is Halil Patrona."~ ~ 3801 X | Who is the presumptuous wretch who would bar the way before 3802 III | forehead is quite free from wrinkles. It would seem as if it 3803 Sel | as is everything by this writer." - Dundee Advertiser.~ ~ 3804 II | which poets and romance writers are so fond of describing 3805 IX | sofa stood a little round writing-table inlaid with gold. On one 3806 Sel | 6)~ ~MRS. BAGOT HARTE.~ ~WRONGLY CONDEMNED. (33)~ ~LINDA 3807 X | spot on their shoulders, wrung her hands in her desperation, 3808 Sel | LINDA GARDINER.~ ~MRS. WYLDE. (36)~ ~AGNES MARCHBANK.~ ~ 3809 X | CHAPTER X.~ ~THE FEAST OF HALWET.~ ~ 3810 XI | CHAPTER XI.~ ~GLIMPSES INTO THE FUTURE.~ ~ 3811 XII | CHAPTER XII.~ ~HUMAN HOPES.~ ~A time 3812 XIII | CHAPTER XIII.~ ~THE EMPTY PLACE.~ ~Everything 3813 III | the eyes of the sleepless yearn for the sun to rise, and 3814 III | midst of thy host which yearns for the light of thy countenance, 3815 VI | these words with a savage yell, raised Patrona on its shoulders, 3816 VI | drives them to the surface.~ ~Yelling and howling, they accompanied 3817 V | him.~ ~"The Sultan did not yield to my arguments," she said 3818 Sel | Jókai. Translated by A. B. Yolland. With a charming Photogravure 3819 VIII | shadows return to the side of yon hills take care to be well 3820 IV | were no weaker than of yore.~ ~One day he was sitting, 3821 IX | whereupon taking his two youngest sons by the hand, with a 3822 | yourselves 3823 X | the Empire, for whom the youths of whole districts have 3824 XI | distributed [Pg 227]the Zakato14 and the Sadakato, 15 that 3825 III | apprentice in the town of Zara, but which had swelled to 3826 XI | have drunk from the well of Zemzem and seven times made the 3827 XIII | following with her eyes the long zig-zag path which vanishes in the 3828 I | narrow, meandering lanes, and zig-zagging backwards and forwards through