1 result for (book:tes6 AND session:278 AND stemmed:three)
[... 36 paragraphs ...]
The color red. 414. Three people. The busts rather than full figures, as three heads for example. (Pause.) I only see the tops of these figures.
[... 7 paragraphs ...]
(“Can you be more specific about the three people?”)
[... 26 paragraphs ...]
(“Three people. The busts rather than full figures, as three heads for example. I only see the tops of these figures.” Our interpretation: Note that Leonard Yaudes addressed the object to Jane and me, after crossing out the name John. [John happens to be a good friend of Leonard’s, though merely an acquaintance of ours; Leonard evidently made an absentminded mistake in addressing the card.] The address line of the card thus contains three names. Above this line is the postage stamp, bearing the head and shoulders of Lincoln.
(Some confusion of clairvoyant images here could have led Jane to assign the bust attribute of Lincoln to the three people on the line below the stamp.
[... 24 paragraphs ...]
(First Question: “Can you be more specific about the three people?” “For some reason the impression is chopped off, so that only the top portion is seen. Heads.” See the data under three people on page 314. The data here, and consequently the answer we give, being the same as the other given earlier.
[... 2 paragraphs ...]
(I then said: “Well, you’re correct, the object is a card.” I wanted to note Jane’s reaction, while in trance, to being told she had named the envelope object at least in a general way. There was none, and she told me later she felt no particular reaction. At the time she said, as Seth: “A grouping”. I took this to mean she was still concerned with the three people data already cited, even though I had waited until she paused in a definite manner before making the comment.
[... 17 paragraphs ...]