Monday, August 11, 2008

Claude Monet Mill near Zaandam painting

Claude Monet Mill near Zaandam paintingClaude Monet Meadows at Giverny paintingClaude Monet Lemon-Trees Bordighera painting
Grandfather's, or the cook's, or the girl next door's? A child might ask, "Auntie, did you dream that head?" The stock answer is, "We all did." Which is, of course, the truth.
Frinthian families and small communities are close-knit and generally harmonious, though quarrels and feuds occur. The research group from Mills that traveled to the Frinthian plane to record and study oneiric brain-wave synchrony agreed that like the synchronisation of menstrual and other cycles within groups on our plane, the communal dreaming of the Frin may serve to establish and strengthen the social bond. They did not speculate as to its psychological or moral effects.
From time to time a Frin is born with unusual powers of projecting and receiving dreams—never one without the other. The Frin call such a dreamer whose signal is unusually clear and powerful a strong mind. That strong-minded dreamers

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