Showing posts with label Claude Monet Woman under the Willows painting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Claude Monet Woman under the Willows painting. Show all posts

Monday, October 6, 2008

Claude Monet Woman under the Willows painting

Claude Monet Woman under the Willows paintingClaude Monet Woman Sitting in a Garden paintingClaude Monet Woman Seated under the Willows painting
when he came to see you. You hurt his feelings very much. Now he’s here again. I want you to see him just
for my sake, to make friends.” But he didn’t answer. If he’s unconscious, it couldn’t make him unhappy to see the priest, could it, doctor?’ Julia, who had been standing still and silent, suddenly moved. ‘Thank you for your advice, doctor,’ she said. ‘I take full responsibility for whatever happens. Father Mackay, will you please come and see my father now,’ and without looking at me, led him to the door.
We all followed. Lord Marchmain was lying as I had seen him that morning, but his eyes were now shut; his hands lay, palms upwards, above the bed-clothes; the nurse had her fingers on the pulse of one of them. ‘Come in,’ she said brightly, ‘you won’t disturb him now.’
‘D’you mean...’
‘No, no, but he’s past noticing anything.’
She held the oxygen apparatus to his face and the hiss

Monday, August 11, 2008

Claude Monet Woman under the Willows painting

Claude Monet Woman under the Willows paintingClaude Monet Woman Sitting in a Garden paintingClaude Monet Woman Seated under the Willows painting
may be invaded by the strange dream visions of lions, antelope, bears, or mice.
While awake, and during much of their sleep, the Frin are as dream-deaf as we are. Only sleepers who are in or approaching REM sleep can participate in the dreams of others also in REM sleep.
REM is an acronym for "rapid eye movement," a visible accompaniment of this stage of sleep; its signal in the brain is a characteristic type of electroencephalic wave. Most of our re-memberable dreams occur during REM sleep.
Frinthian REM sleep and that of people on our plane yield very similar EEG traces, though there are some significant differences, in which may lie the key to the Frinthian ability to share dreams.
To share, the dreamers must be fairly close to one another. The carrying power of the average Frinthian dream is about that of the average human voice. A dream can be received easily within a hundred-meter radius, and bits and fragments of it may carry a good deal farther. A strong dream in a solitary place may well carry for two kilometers or even farther.