1 result for (book:tes6 AND session:257 AND stemmed:round)
[... 58 paragraphs ...]
The words unholy alliance come to me here. A selection, or something offered from which selections may be made. A star shape. Something round, again, with spokes leading outward, but rather prominent. For us.
A connection with markings and dates, and a connection with a horse perhaps. Some connection here, but distant. Squares. Perhaps a game connection. A small round circle suggesting a postmark. Red or blue.
[... 11 paragraphs ...]
(“A framework, that seems to be wooden, with thin lines like poles.” We believe this data is reinforced by the “high ledge shape” data given later, and that it refers to my studio, wherein the page of manuscript used as object was written. Jane uses the studio in the mornings while I am working outside. Her desk faces a row of five windows, tall and narrow, and with small panes. The studio is actually a glass-enclosed back porch, second story, converted to year-round use.
[... 12 paragraphs ...]
(“A star shape. Something round, again, with spokes leading outward, but rather prominent.” Jane immediately thought of this diagram when she read over Seth’s data. It is on the back of page 112 of the first draft of chapter five of the dream book. Jane believes that she quite possibly made the diagram on the same day she typed up page 80, which was used as envelope object. Page 112 was used in the final version of chapter five, fortunately, and so was not thrown away. I had not seen the diagram before. It is one Jane made to help her see clearly certain points involving the whole self, and waking and dreaming states. There was much handwritten copy beneath it. Jane located the diagram immediately after this session. She said it is the only one she made for the dream book; she has the habit of making many notes on her manuscript, but very few diagrams of this kind.
[... 4 paragraphs ...]
(“A small round circle suggesting a postmark.” In the upper right-hand corner of the object is the page number, enclosed in a circle, and in approximately the position of an envelope postmark.
[... 9 paragraphs ...]