| The pic below is of a woman named Patricia Wron and what is so impressive is how she lost 37lbs in literally a matter of weeks! And... What's even crazier... is that she was a 45 year old, out of shape diabetic with a serious thyroid problem and managed to make this completely vanish by eliminating 2 vegetables from her diet! Her transformation sounds unreal but check out this pic for proof... Crazy transformation, right? Well... If you want to see results like this, then you need to follow in Patricia's footsteps and AVOID the 2 vegetables below... => AVOID These 2 Veggies And Lose 37+ Pounds Like Patricia.. Here's to you eating less veggies and getting faster fat loss results! To your success!
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| THE CHARM of Daudet's talent comes from its being charged to an extraordinary degree with his temperament, his feelings, his instincts, his natural qualities. This, of course, is a charm in a style only when nature has been generous. To Alphonse Daudet she has been exceptionally so; she has placed in his hand an instrument of many chords. A delicate nervous organisation, active and indefatigable in spite of its delicacy, and familiar with emotion of almost every kind, equally acquainted with pleasure and with pain; a light, quick, joyous, yet reflective, imagination, a faculty of seeing images, making images, at every turn, of conceiving everything in the visible form, in the plastic spirit; an extraordinary sensibility to all the impressions of life and a faculty of language which is in perfect harmony with his wonderful fineness of perception-these are some of the qualities of which he is the happy possessor, and which make his equipment for the work he has undertaken exceedingly rich.-From "Partial Portraits" (1888). DAUDET works in a sort of fever. Even before beginning to write his books, he has related, acted, and almost "lived" them. This habit responds to a necessity of his nature, and this he also constitutes his process of composition. The original sketch is only an improvisation, but with the second version begins what he calls the painful part of his labor. He first abandons himself to his fancy, giving free rein to his troubadour instincts. The subject urges him on and outstrips him; his hand glides rapidly over the paper without writing all the words, or even pausing to punctuate, in the effort to follow the fever of his toiling brain by hastily stenographing ideas and sentiments. Only with that "trembling of the fingers," with him a sign of inspiration, does he take up his pen. He at once launches into the full current of the action. As his figures are already "on foot in his mind," he loses no time in introducing them in full activity. The greater part of his novels consists in a series of pictures or episodes which pass in file beneath our eyes. There are no preludes either at the outset or in passing from one chapter to another; he explains the situation by a word, leaving the reader to imagine such events as are not adapted to an entirely actual mise en scène. He renders only what moves his heart and sets his nerves in vibration-what is dramatic, picturesque, and animated in human affairs.-From "The Literary Movement in France in the Nineteenth Century" (1893). WE were going up Avenue des Champs-Elysées with Dr. V--, asking the shell-riddled walls, and the sidewalks torn up by grape-shot, for the story of the siege of Paris, when, just before we reached the Rond-point de l'Etoile, the doctor stopped and, pointing to one of the great corner houses so proudly grouped about the Arc de Triomphe, said to me: | | |
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