Matisse Picasso and Gertrude Stein eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 439 pages of information about Matisse Picasso and Gertrude Stein.

Matisse Picasso and Gertrude Stein eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 439 pages of information about Matisse Picasso and Gertrude Stein.

Knowing that any one is doing what that one is doing, suspecting that any one is the one that one is, is what some one, who is one and is all of the one who is what she is, is completely doing.  This one the one who is all of what she is, is one suspecting that any one is what they are, is knowing that any one is doing what they are doing.  She is all of that one and being all of that one is knowing everything, is suspecting everything.  She is suspecting anything and in suspecting anything is deciding to be suspecting something and in suspecting that thing is suspecting that every one is doing what every one is doing.  She is knowing anything and knowing anything of any one is one deciding that something she is knowing of every one is what every one is and she is knowing everything.  She is that one.  She is all of that one.  She being all of that one and suspecting everything and knowing everything is all of one.

There are some suspecting something.  There are some knowing something.  There are some knowing and suspecting something.

One was knowing that some one should not continue to show to some one something.  She was suspecting that the one looking at what some one was continuing to show him was saying what would discourage the one showing something.  She was one knowing something and suspecting something.  She was one.

She was one and being that one there were very many little ones.  She was one and being that one and there being another one she was one feeling that she would not be continuing to live long.

She was living and in living she was exercising that living is existing.  She was living and she was exhausting continuing being living.  She was living and being that one she was living.

She could be one.  In being one she was not saying that she was that one the one she was being, she was not saying anything.

She could be one.  She was saying something.  She was saying that she liked some things.

She could be one.  She was one.  She was not saying anything.  She could be one.  She was not saying anything.

She could be one.  In not saying anything she was not saying anything of that thing.  She was not saying anything of not saying anything.

She could be one.  She was one.  She was saying something.  She was saying that anything is something.  She was saying that something which is something is everything and that everything is not something and not being something she would be suspecting that in continuing it was not everything.  She was not saying anything of this thing.

She could be one accompanying some one and always accompanying some one she could always have been listening.  In being one who could always have been listening she was one not saying anything.  In being one not saying anything she was one suspecting what she was suspecting.  In being one suspecting she was one deciding and in deciding she was arranging and in arranging she was continuing that the one she was accompanying was not showing what he might have been showing.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Matisse Picasso and Gertrude Stein from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.