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Stein, Gertrude, 1874-1946

"Matisse Picasso and Gertrude Stein With Two Shorter Stories"

How sweet is the light in a ladle and how dark is
daintiness, how sweet is anything and how sweet is that which is
particular.
Laying an egg this is the occupation of a horse, laying an egg every
egg, laying every egg this is the period of fasting. Not lying in the
midst of more oysters than anything, not lying down in drinking, all
this shows no shrinking. All the time that is spent is communion,
communion is that occupation which is audible.
Soap is not only a hope it is a release. When is it a release, it is a
release when the quiet is so great that no sound whistles.
A lively wedding is not useless, it shows action, it shows measure, it
shows union.
A change into a result means that nothing is overthrown.
Incase a whole heap into a piano, suffer the piano not to have keys, be
careful of any examination that is not cured, show that the color
softens and then say that there is observation, say it, does this make
any one sad, it does and it does so because that weight which is that
woe is so tardy and so surrounded and so sensitive in circulating an
ending that there are no signs of babies and yet babies are not younger,
at least they are not so much younger.
It came, the time came to explain that since if there is the whole
surrounding surface and that is a stable full then certainly there can
be no sign of rubber.


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