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Stein, Gertrude, 1874-1946

"Matisse Picasso and Gertrude Stein With Two Shorter Stories"

Any letter shows that. A mingling of not
drinking is sweeter. There is no dust. There was a time when all the
teeth that were were so expressed that some effect was bitten and yet
morally, and morally is not a repetition, and yet morally the synonym is
not so excessive. A plunge is not more hardy than an allusion to
something. Photography is not agonising. It is a change in deportment.
It is accustomed to acceptation. It is not convenient in embroidery.
A blind page is one with edges and mingling, this makes it show when
there is opposition, this makes it show a sheet. And yet a plaything is
honorable and an extravagant silence is well spent and surely if the
temper show that then being happy is everything. Resembling is not a
suspicion. It is autocratic. There is no rebuke. A fence is not
furnished. No mind is matter. This is so little that there is no minor
mirror. All the tickling is tender.
There is no more use in the time of day than there is place for a water
pressure, not a bit and certainly the whole piece is industrious, it has
that sparkle. All the same the curiosity is that when there is all of
that the change is monotonous, it means union, it means the baking of
any piece of apple and pear and potato it means more than that. Kind
light is any light and the whole place is lighter. This means that if
there is an approach there is the use of the sprinkle and sprinkling is
so well when it is particular and playing.


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