1 result for (book:tes7 AND session:317 AND stemmed:price)
[... 31 paragraphs ...]
Now. Ruburt had several dreams concerning Miss Price, also a therapeutic dream last evening that he did not remember. During this period he did not remember his dreams because he purposely closed subconscious channels.
There was a slight stroke on the left side several months ago with Miss Price, and Ruburt knew of this in a dream. There was, I believe, a hospital stay, though whether this was connected with the stroke I do not know.
The impending death also brought forth associations concerning Saratoga, you see. Miss Price was to some extent a substitute mother image indeed, and a rather dangerous one potentially, in any case, because of the confusion in sex identity. (Saratoga Springs, NY, is Jane’s hometown.)
The poetry served as a convenient and suitable substitute for sexual attraction here on Miss Price’s part. On the other hand she viewed Ruburt as the daughter she would never have, while Ruburt viewed her as the mother she wished for.
All of this highly hidden of course. The sexual charge was always used in transformed nature by Miss Price, and turned into the propelling action of many beneficial deeds, for she helped literally hundreds of students, forcing their best from them. She had a military background in two past lives.
[... 1 paragraph ...]
Ruburt’s letters in a metal box, with some clothing on top of the box. The poetry is separate. A sister of Miss Price’s is connected here. You will also hear from Miss Healy again. I believe she will join Blanche before long. (Pause, eyes closed.) The number 1815 may refer to a safety deposit box, I do not know. Give us a moment.
[... 17 paragraphs ...]
(Jane received a telegram from Ann Healy on February 2, Thursday, informing her of the death of her college teacher friend, Blanche Price. Jane answered the wire this morning before writing me the note. The answer was by letter after unsuccessful attempts to telephone Ann Healy over the weekend. I thought that possibly the data had been displaced from Jane’s note to me, to the letter she wrote Anne. The two were closely connected in time, and both concerned highly charged events for Jane.
[... 13 paragraphs ...]