1 result for (book:tes7 AND session:296 AND stemmed:packag)
[... 42 paragraphs ...]
The entrance of an outsider. A rectangular package, covered with white tissue paper, and divided in fours by a slim blue ribbon.
[... 41 paragraphs ...]
(“An article that opens up.” I believe there are two choices of interpretation here. I favor the first one: that the data refers to the large flat package in which Bill Ward mailed me the artwork to be finished. “Writing on the inside and outside.” The package of course contained writing both inside and outside. “Or at least the inside and outside are covered.” This may refer to the package in a somewhat distorted manner. Or it may refer quite accurately to the envelope object itself, which would be the second possibility for this block of data.
[... 13 paragraphs ...]
(“A rectangular package, covered with white tissue paper, and divided in fours by a slim blue ribbon.” Jane had an image here. She saw mentally the four divisions, and had the feeling of blue—of a white package with blue lines or ribbons dividing it.
(Distortion probably operates here. Note that the bill used as the object has blue lines upon it. Bill Ward’s artwork arrived in a large rectangular package, but contained no tissue paper and bore no ribbons or string; it was instead sealed with tape. Nor did it contain any blue. Jane thinks she may have received accurate-enough data from Seth about a package, and constructed perhaps the ribbons herself because that is symbolic of packages. She used blue ribbons perhaps through a distortion of the blue pertaining to the envelope object.
[... 12 paragraphs ...]
(6th Question: What shape is the object? “I am confused between a metallic image, or the feeling of metal. The cube shapes, and the impression of a rectangular shape also. The metal image or feeling seems to predominate with the cubes. These of course could be on a rectangular object.” Interpretations have already been given for the cubes, Jungle Gyms, metallic data, and the rectangular package, and Jane still cannot quite sort them out here.
(All are apparently linked with the envelope object in some fashion. The Art Shop bill used as object is rectangular in shape, but Jane mentioned a rectangular package earlier so we are not sure of what interpretation to assign here.
[... 7 paragraphs ...]