1 result for (book:tes7 AND session:281 AND stemmed:invit)
[... 59 paragraphs ...]
Four plus one. A connection with February 3, I believe. With a rose. Connection with a journey, and invitation. With a brush or something that resembles it, with bristles. 1821 or 1812, perhaps Milwaukee or Wisconsin.
[... 30 paragraphs ...]
(In addition, within the past month we have received an announcement of the forthcoming marriage of another D’Andreano, Louie, also in Rochester. We have been invited. Louie witnessed a session a couple of year ago, and was interested in this material for some time. This new wedding, we think, freshens the D’Andreano association. We think there is also another association involving this data—the fact that the two Dicks were involved—Dick in the backyard, and my own brother Dick in Rochester.
[... 3 paragraphs ...]
(“Connection with a journey, and invitation.” Jane believes these apply in the following manner: Barbara’s boyfriend Dick lives perhaps 25 miles away, and thus had to journey to see her on the night the three people were grouped in the yard, when Jane produced the poem used as object. Invitation can apply through Barbara’s talk about marriage to Dick. It also applies through Barbara calling to me to join the threesome; she thought I was in the studio. I had instead begun taking a nap and did not hear.
(Another invitation applies through the wedding invitation to the latest D’Andreano wedding, recently received by Jane and me. Accepting this would also involve our journeying to Rochester.
[... 5 paragraphs ...]
(“Black and white. Please reply.” This is another reference to the upcoming wedding of Louie D’Andreano, to which Jane and I have been invited. The announcement was printed in black ink on white, as is usual. It also requested that Jane and I reply in writing as to whether we planned to attend. Once again, the D’Andreano wedding data, involving the present one concerning Louie, and the distant one concerning my brother Dick, is called up by Jane’s associations, because of the marriage talk between Barbara and Dick on the evening of July 3,1966, when Jane wrote the poem used as object.
[... 8 paragraphs ...]
(“And tissue paper.” Another connection to the D’Andreano family. The wedding announcement and the invitation we received concerning the forthcoming marriage of Louie D’Andreano, contained the usual tissue paper interleaves.
[... 9 paragraphs ...]