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Stein, Gertrude, 1874-1946

"Matisse Picasso and Gertrude Stein With Two Shorter Stories"

She had not
come to be a dead one. She had not come to be what she would come to be.
Each one is one, there are many of them. Each one, every one, all of
them, any of them, one of them, one of them, each one being, every one
being, any one is the one and the one is the one and any history is the
meaning of the one not meaning what any meaning is meaning.
One is one. Why is one one. One is one because one being one is sweetly
telling that thing and sweetly telling that thing is sweetly telling
that that one being one is meaning, and not meaning what any meaning is
meaning, is being the one sweetly telling that that one is hearing that
that one sweetly telling that, that that one, is one is sweetly telling.
One is one if one were one and sweetly telling something that one would
be telling something sweetly. Any one can be telling that that one is
not sweetly telling anything. This one is one. She is one and is telling
that she has been telling delicately telling what she would have been
sweetly telling if she had not been telling what she has been telling.
She is telling what she is telling and telling that she is telling that
thing as she would be telling that thing if she were sweetly telling
that thing.
She is one and telling is what she is doing in telling what she is
telling, and that telling is what she is excelling in telling she is
telling, in the way she would be telling what she is telling if she were
sweetly telling what she is telling.


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