Matisse Picasso and Gertrude Stein - With Two Shorter Stories by Gertrude Stein
page 13 of 406 (03%)
page 13 of 406 (03%)
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other thing. If there is a thin thing some are denying that it is a thin
thing. If there is a thin thing some are not hearing what some one has been saying who has been saying that the thin thing is a thin thing. There are thin things and some of them are hanging in front of something. There are thin things and they are nicely thin things, things nicely being thin enough and letting then all the light in. If there are thin things they are thin enough to hang and let light in. If there are thin things it is certain that they are like some other things. There are thin things and any one not having seen them is not completely certain that they are thin things. They are thin things the things that are thin things and some have seen them and have said then that those things are thin things. A man in his living has many things inside him. He has in him his being certain that he is being one seeing what he is looking at just then, he has in him the kind of certain feeling of seeing what he is looking at just then that makes a kind of them of which a list will be made in making out a list of every one. This feeling of being certain of seeing what he is looking at just then comes from the being in him that is being then in him, comes from the mixing in him of being then one being living and being one then being certain of that thing. In all of the men being living some are more certain than other ones who are very much like them are more certain of seeing the thing at which they are looking. In all men in their daily living, in every moment they are living, in all of them, in all the time they are being living, in the times they are doing, in the times they are not doing something, in all of them |
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