1 result for (book:tes1 AND heading:"session of januari 4 1964" AND stemmed:shoe)
[... 8 paragraphs ...]
(I see the name Sarah Wellington. She was in a cobbler’s shop—that’s where they make shoes.
(It was in 1748, in England. They were leather shoes. They had huge cowhides hanging up in a back room of the cobbler’s shop, and there were a lot of dried cowhides hanging up in another room, too. It was very cold in there, where the first cowhides were. It wasn’t ventilated, they didn’t have any windows there.
[... 2 paragraphs ...]
(Sarah lived 3 doors down the street in a dark front room. She had two brothers, one off someplace, he was a sailor. The other was younger. Sarah’s father did something for the cobbler, so he made shoes for the young brother and she was in the shop to get the shoes.
(I don’t know what Sarah’s father did for the cobbler. It was a craft, something he bartered for shoes. Something to do with fishing nets. The village was right by the sea. It was the only cobbler’s shop in quite a few villages around there, and there was a lot of community bartering going on. Sarah’s father made fishnets out of seaweed, dried seaweed, sounds crazy, doesn’t it? They wove it together like rope, then made the nets.
[... 29 paragraphs ...]
(At one moment I thought I glimpsed, far ahead on the horizon on the right, a group of pyramids, in some kind of cool brilliant color, blues or greens. I could not see the bases of these structures and am not positive they were even pyramids. The whole viewpoint of this data was very dramatic, low, very close to the ground. I seem to remember being able to see the soles of the feet, wrinkled and brown and without shoes, lifting after each stride. I recall them being covered with dust. It was a vigorous stride.)