Chapter
1 2 | and activity rare in young Turks, haughty by nature and self-restrained
2 2 | gloomy despotism of the Turks, a man in any position of
3 3 | the warlike habits of the Turks, to bestow the Government
4 6 | the height, charged the Turks with so much fury that they
5 7 | chosen by both English and Turks. The result of this valuation
6 7 | street to street, for the Turks had been perceived on the
7 7 | the embarkation, which the Turks hailed from afar with, ferocious
8 8 | specially obtained from the Turks, our common enemies: it
9 9 | wavering fidelity of the Turks. Mouktar, on the contrary,
10 9 | submission to the sultan. The Turks, continuing their success,
11 9 | church, where Greeks and Turks alike deposited their gold,
12 9 | directions. Those who escaped the Turks were stopped in the hill
13 9 | the acclamations of the Turks who saluted Pacho Bey, his
14 9 | passed slowly before the Turks, saluting them with cannon-shot
15 9 | redoubled his fire upon the Turks. ~But the latter, who had
16 9 | shouted his war-cry. A few Turks in charge of an outpost
17 9 | pieces of cannon, which the Turks, notwithstanding their terror,
18 10| arrived, during which the Turks relax hostilities, and a
19 11| bestowed on their sultan by the Turks in seasons of popular excitement. ~
20 11| sword in hand, upon the Turks, and driving them back,
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