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Today's Stichomancy for Joseph Stalin

The first excerpt represents the past or something you must release, and is drawn from Salome by Oscar Wilde:

LE CAPPADOCIEN. Je n'ai jamais vu Cesar.

SECOND SOLDAT. Un autre qui vient de la ville de Chypre, qui est jaune comme de l'or.

LE CAPPADOCIEN. J'aime beaucoup l'or.

SECOND SOLDAT. Et le troisieme qui est un vin sicilien. Ce vin-le est rouge comme le sang.

LE NUBIEN. Les dieux de mon pays aiment beaucoup le sang. Deux fois par an nous leur sacrifions des jeunes hommes et des vierges: cinquante jeunes hommes et cent vierges. Mais il semble que nous ne leur donnons jamais assez, car ils sont tres durs envers nous.

LE CAPPADOCIEN. Dans mon pays il n'y a pas de dieux e present, les

The second excerpt represents the present or the deciding factor of the moment, and is drawn from A Princess of Parms by Edgar Rice Burroughs:

trivial errand. I liked and trusted Sola, but for some reason I desired to be alone with Dejah Thoris, who represented to me all that I had left behind upon Earth in agreeable and congenial companionship. There seemed bonds of mutual interest between us as powerful as though we had been born under the same roof rather than upon different planets, hurtling through space some forty-eight million miles apart.

That she shared my sentiments in this respect I was positive, for on my approach the look of pitiful hopelessness left her sweet countenance to be replaced by a smile of joyful welcome, as she placed her little right hand upon my left

The third excerpt represents the future or something you must embrace, and is drawn from Little Rivers by Henry van Dyke:

head of Pelmo. Across the broad vale of the Boite, Antelao stood beside Sorapis, like a campanile beside a cathedral, and Cristallo towered above the green pass of the Three Crosses. Through that opening we could see the bristling peaks of the Sextenthal. Sweeping around in a wider circle from that point, we saw, beyond the Durrenstein, the snow-covered pile of the Gross-Glockner; the crimson bastions of the Rothwand appeared to the north, behind Tofana; then the white slopes that hang far away above the Zillerthal; and, nearer, the Geislerspitze, like five fingers thrust into the air; behind that, the distant Oetzthaler Mountain, and just a single white glimpse of the highest peak of the Ortler