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Today's Stichomancy for William Gibson

The first excerpt represents the past or something you must release, and is drawn from Cousin Pons by Honore de Balzac:

"Our poor patient is struggling in the grasp of death," he said. "All will be over in a few hours. You will send a priest, no doubt, to watch to-night. But it is time that Mme. Cantinet came, as well as a woman to do the work, for M. Schmucke is quite unfit to think of anything: I am afraid for his reason; and there are valuables here which ought to be in the custody of honest persons."

The Abbe Duplanty, a kindly, upright priest, guileless and unsuspicious, was struck with the truth of Dr. Poulain's remarks. He had, moreover, a certain belief in the doctor of the quarter. So on the threshold of the death-chamber he stopped and beckoned to Schmucke, but Schmucke could not bring himself to loosen the grasp of

The second excerpt represents the present or the deciding factor of the moment, and is drawn from 1492 by Mary Johntson:

above us, the brilliant small lizards darted around silver trunks. ``The fairest day!'' quoth the Admiral. ``Ease at heart! I feel ease at heart.''

This night, as I sat beside him, wiling him to sleep, for he always had trouble sleeping--a most wakeful man!-- he talked to me about the Queen. Toward this great woman he ever showed veneration, piety, and knightly regard. Of all in Spain she it was who best understood and shared that religious part in him that breathed upward, inspired, longed and strained toward worlds truly not on the earthly map. She, like him--or so took leave to think Juan Lepe--received

The third excerpt represents the future or something you must embrace, and is drawn from Hiero by Xenophon:

country labourers with their flocks and herds would greatly benefit, a benefit not limited to your demesne, but shared by every farm throughout the rural district.

Again, these mercenaries, if set to guard strategic points,[5] would leave the citizens full leisure to attend to matters of more private interest.

[5] Or, "as garrisons of critical positions," like Phyle or Decelia near Athens.

And again, a further function: Can you conceive a service better qualified to gain intelligence beforehand and to hinder the secret sudden onslaughts of a hostile force, than a set of troopers always