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After the Absolute - Chapter 9 | Happiness

https://www.searchwithin.org/after-the-absolute/chapter-9.htm

of dragging food and cooking gear all the way to the campsite convinced me to do the same. A sleeping bag, water jug, flashlight, and maybe a book or two was all I would need. I w
Chapter 9, After the Absolute. The Inner Teachings of Richard Rose. Real life adventures with a backwoods Buddha.

Archive | by Brian Koberlein

https://briankoberlein.com/archive/

18th What’s Cooking? 17th This Sucker’s Nuclear? 16th In Living Color 15th That’s About the Size of It 14th Yuri’s Night 13th Spin Flip 12th Granular Mater

SOUTH-AFRICAN FOLK TALES

https://www.dankalia.com/literature/frc198.htm

to see all the fat meat cooking, and all the biltongs hanging out to dry, the reim was again cut, and the poor Lion fell with such force that he was fairly stunned for some time.

The Project Gutenberg eBook of Every day Life in the Massachusetts Bay Colony, by George Francis Dow.

https://www.gutenberg.org/files/43970/43970-h/43970-h.htm

December! In those days cooking on shore was done in an open fireplace. On shipboard, the larger vessels were provided with an open "hearth" made of cast iron sometimes weighing f

A LOOK AT THE STATE

http://nietzsche.holtof.com/Nietzsche_human_all_too_human/sect8_a_look_at_the_state.htm

same reason that the cooking in large kitchens is at best mediocre. 468 Innocent corruption. In all institutions that do not feel the sharp wind of public criticism (as, for examp

Born in Slavery: Slave Narratives from the Federal Writers' Project 1936-1938: Georgia Narratives, Volume IV, Part 4

https://www.gutenberg.org/files/18485/18485-h/18485-h.htm

in winter. A variety of cooking utensils were given and large numbers of waffle irons, etc., then considered luxuries, were found here. To consider only the general plan of operat

Arthur Peronneau Ford. "Life in the Confederate Army; Being PersonalExperiences ..."

https://docsouth.unc.edu/fpn/ford/ford.html

men did their own work, cooking, etc. As a rule, these negroes liked the life exceedingly. The work exacted of them was necessarily very light. They were never under fire, unless
Life in the Confederate army :being

E.S. Drower: Peacock Angel, Part 3.

https://www.avesta.org/yezidi/peacock3.htm

Primus which we used as cooking-stove, for that certainly would not flourish on an olive-oil diet. However, it was never brought into question. Mikhail erected the Primus in the s
Drower's memoirs on visiting the Yezidis.

ERBzine 1965a: 2. Rescue in Pellucidar by Rick Johnson

https://www.erbzine.com/mag19/1965a.html

soon the carcass was cooking slowly by the women who had finally taken some hard work for themselves.  Finally, one came to Barry and pointing to himself said “Barto” then to

The National Nursery Book, by Various.

https://www.ajhw.co.uk/books/book357/book357.html

near her while she was cooking, but she was obliged to take him with her when she went out milking, for she dared not trust the little man in the house alone. A few days after his

Bald Stories: Folktales about Hairless Men

https://sites.pitt.edu/~dash/bald.html

the farmwife was just cooking up some large yeast pancakes in grease. According to others it was noodles. Saint Peter entered the house to beg for some pancakes, while the Lord wa

Luminist Archives: A Stange Island by Louisa May Alcott

http://www.luminist.org/archives/a_strange_island.htm

to the improvements in cooking, and no accounting for tastes,” I added, looking at a handsomely dressed lady, who sat near, eating bread and honey.     
A Stange Island: a short story by Louisa May Alcott


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