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Today's Stichomancy for Orson Welles

The first excerpt represents the past or something you must release, and is drawn from Tom Grogan by F. Hopkinson Smith:

his life.

"What's that?" asked Tom, still looking square at him, Quigg squirming under her glance like a worm on a pin.

"Well, the company can't tell how much feed was in the bins, and tools, and sech like," he said, with another laugh.

A laugh is always a safe parry when a pair of clear gray search-light eyes are cutting into one like a rapier.

"An' yer idea is for me to git paid for stuff that wasn't burned up, is it?"

"Well, that's as how the adjuster says. Sometimes he sees it an' sometimes he don't--that's where the pull comes in."

The second excerpt represents the present or the deciding factor of the moment, and is drawn from A Second Home by Honore de Balzac:

by circumstance. Each perhaps hoped to preserve a cherished illusion. It might almost have been thought that the stranger feared lest he should hear some vulgar word from those lips as fresh and pure as a flower, and that Caroline felt herself unworthy of the mysterious personage who was evidently possessed of power and wealth.

As to Madame Crochard, that tender mother, almost angry at her daughter's persistent lack of decisiveness, now showed a sulky face to the "Black Gentleman," on whom she had hitherto smiled with a sort of benevolent servility. Never before had she complained so bitterly of being compelled, at her age, to do the cooking; never had her catarrh and her rheumatism wrung so many groans from her; finally, she could

The third excerpt represents the future or something you must embrace, and is drawn from Almayer's Folly by Joseph Conrad:

his hands there with a suddenly vivid and sad perception of the fact that he himself was growing old too; that the time of reckless daring was past for both of them, and that they had to seek refuge in prudent cunning. They wanted peace; they were disposed to reform; they were ready even to retrench, so as to have the wherewithal to bribe the evil days away, if bribed away they could be. Babalatchi sighed for the second time that night as he squatted again at his master's feet and tendered him his betel-nut box in mute sympathy. And they sat there in close yet silent communion of betel-nut chewers, moving their jaws slowly, expectorating decorously into the wide-mouthed brass vessel they


Almayer's Folly