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Today's Stichomancy for Jay Leno

The first excerpt represents the past or something you must release, and is drawn from Lay Morals by Robert Louis Stevenson:

given amply; the cry for circuses will be the louder, and if the life of our descendants be such as we have conceived, there are two beloved pleasures on which they will be likely to fall back: the pleasures of intrigue and of sedition.

In all this I have supposed the ant-heap to be financially sound. I am no economist, only a writer of fiction; but even as such, I know one thing that bears on the economic question - I know the imperfection of man's faculty for business. The Anarchists, who count some rugged elements of common sense among what seem to me their tragic errors, have said upon this matter all that I could wish to say, and condemned

The second excerpt represents the present or the deciding factor of the moment, and is drawn from King Henry VI by William Shakespeare:

O, hold me not with silence over-long! Where I was wont to feed you with my blood, I 'll lop a member off and give it you In earnest of a further benefit, So you do condescend to help me now.

[They hang their heads.]

No hope to have redress? My body shall Pay recompense, if you will grant my suit.

[They shake their heads.]

Cannot my body nor blood-sacrifice Entreat you to your wonted furtherance?

The third excerpt represents the future or something you must embrace, and is drawn from Ballads by Robert Louis Stevenson:

INTRODUCTION. - I first heard this legend of my own country from that friend of men of letters, Mr. Alfred Nutt, "there in roaring London's central stream," and since the ballad first saw the light of day in SCRIBNER'S MAGAZINE, Mr. Nutt and Lord Archibald Campbell have been in public controversy on the facts. Two clans, the Camerons and the Campbells, lay claim to this bracing story; and they do well: the man who preferred his plighted troth to the commands and menaces of the dead is an ancestor worth disputing. But the Campbells must rest content: they have the broad lands and the broad page of history; this appanage must be denied them; for


Ballads