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Today's Stichomancy for Ridley Scott

The first excerpt represents the past or something you must release, and is drawn from Essays of Francis Bacon by Francis Bacon:

Yet to be distracted with many is worse; for it makes men to be of the last impression, and full of change. To take advice of some few friends, is ever honorable; for lookers-on many times see more than gamesters; and the vale best discovereth the hill. There is little friendship in the world, and least of all between equals, which was wont to be mag- nified. That that is, is between superior and in- ferior, whose fortunes may comprehend the one the other.

Of Suitors


Essays of Francis Bacon
The second excerpt represents the present or the deciding factor of the moment, and is drawn from The Sportsman by Xenophon:

a portal of admission. What happens then is this: the wild beasts, hearing the bleating in the night, keep scampering round the barrier, and finding no passage, leap over it, and are caught.[5]

[5] See "Tales from the Fjeld," Sir George W. Dasent, "Father Bruin in the Corner."

XII

With regard to methods of procedure in the hunting-field, enough has been said.[1] But there are many benefits which the enthusiastic sportsman may expect to derive from this pursuit.[2] I speak of the health which will thereby accrue to the physical frame, the quickening of the eye and ear, the defiance of old age, and last, but not least,

The third excerpt represents the future or something you must embrace, and is drawn from The Time Machine by H. G. Wells:

two words, and I failed to convey or understand any but the simplest propositions. I determined to put the thought of my Time Machine and the mystery of the bronze doors under the sphinx as much as possible in a corner of memory, until my growing knowledge would lead me back to them in a natural way. Yet a certain feeling, you may understand, tethered me in a circle of a few miles round the point of my arrival.

`So far as I could see, all the world displayed the same exuberant richness as the Thames valley. From every hill I climbed I saw the same abundance of splendid buildings, endlessly varied in material and style, the same clustering thickets of


The Time Machine