1 result for (book:tes6 AND session:261 AND stemmed:ground)
[... 39 paragraphs ...]
The building (eyes open) has a resemblance to an English-type mansion, or large building of this sort, set in fine grounds. The turnstile may simply be symbolic—you may have to pay to enter the building. Perhaps on some sort of tour.
[... 15 paragraphs ...]
The sort of lines for example that a map would have to indicate small roads, or the lines like cracks in a dry ground.
[... 33 paragraphs ...]
(“The sort of lines for example that a map would have to indicate small roads, or the lines like cracks in a dry ground.” My second question asked for more on the wavering lines impression discussed on page 185. See the copy of the object on page 178. The drawing is composed of thin pencil lines in part at least, and these could in the abstract represent small roads on a map, or lines like cracks in dry ground.
(Jane didn’t have much to say about the map simile, but thought the ground crack idea pertinent. While sitting in the sun, smoking the one cigarette she had with her—it is shown in the sketch, which means she smoked it after I finished the drawing—she looked for a bare spot of ground against which to put the smoke out. In doing so she realized that the ground was quite dry, and that we needed more rain.
[... 21 paragraphs ...]