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Today's Stichomancy for Steven Spielberg

The first excerpt represents the past or something you must release, and is drawn from King Henry VI by William Shakespeare:

[Trumpets sound. Enter Reignier, below.]

REIGNIER. Welcome, brave earl, into our territories: Command in Anjou what your honor pleases.

SUFFOLK. Thanks, Reignier, happy for so sweet a child, Fit to be made companion with a king: What answer makes your grace unto my suit?

REIGNIER. Since thou dost deign to woo her little worth To be the princely bride of such a lord;

The second excerpt represents the present or the deciding factor of the moment, and is drawn from Emma by Jane Austen:

Yes, my dear, I ran home, as I said I should, to help grandmama to bed, and got back again, and nobody missed me.--I set off without saying a word, just as I told you. Grandmama was quite well, had a charming evening with Mr. Woodhouse, a vast deal of chat, and backgammon.--Tea was made downstairs, biscuits and baked apples and wine before she came away: amazing luck in some of her throws: and she inquired a great deal about you, how you were amused, and who were your partners. `Oh!' said I, `I shall not forestall Jane; I left her dancing with Mr. George Otway; she will love to tell you all about it herself to-morrow: her first partner was Mr. Elton, I do not know who will ask her next, perhaps Mr. William Cox.'


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

turfy soil of the Ring itself. In truth the situation was well qualified to give a zest to Christian doctrines, had there been any wanted. But these congregations assembled under conditions at once so formidable and romantic as made a zealot of the most cold. They were the last of the faithful; God, who had averted His face from all other countries of the world, still leaned from heaven to observe, with swelling sympathy, the doings of His moorland remnant; Christ was by them with His eternal wounds, with dropping tears; the Holy Ghost (never perfectly realised nor firmly adopted by Protestant imaginations) was dimly supposed to be in the