This percipience, following on earlier impercipience, is very odd. |
He kept looking, which was another poem — a poem about the peculiar percipience of the one who gazes out a window. |
But it is a relief to see that the drugs appear to have done no permanent damage, and that age has not otherwise impaired his percipience. |
The archive he has assembled is utterly unique and is a record of the percipience and acuteness of vision that, come what may, he has persisted in maintaining. |
We consider indeed conditions for percipience, but only so far as those conditions are among the disclosures of perception. |
And we now come to other cases, where the percipience has been collective, although it has not been repeated. |