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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 Historical Lecturers and Essays by Charles Kingsley:

wolves, each in the nearest wood. And so arise those truly monstrous Eastern despotisms, of which modern Persia is, thank God, the only remaining specimen; for Turkey and Egypt are too amenable of late years to the influence of the free nations to be counted as despotisms pure and simple--despotisms in which men, instead of worshipping a God-man, worship the hideous counterfeit, a Man-god--a poor human being endowed by public opinion with the powers of deity, while he is the slave of all the weaknesses of humanity. But such, as an historic fact, has been the last stage of every civilisation-- even that of Rome, which ripened itself upon this earth the last in ancient times, and, I had almost said, until this very day, except

The second excerpt represents the present or the deciding factor of the moment, and is drawn from War and the Future by H. G. Wells:

accumulation of future dangers in Ireland, Egypt, India, and elsewhere, for an apparent absence of internal friction. These people have no gratitude for tacit help, no spirit of intelligent service, and no sense of fair play to the outsider. The latter deficiency indeed they call /esprit de corps/ and prize it as if it were a noble quality.

It becomes more and more imperative that the foreign observer should distinguish between this narrower, older official Britain and the greater newer Britain that struggles to free itself from the entanglement of a system outgrown. There are many Englishmen who would like to say to the French and Irish and the Italians

The third excerpt represents the future or something you must embrace, and is drawn from Tristram Shandy by Laurence Sterne:

Eugenius; but I triumph'd over him as I always do, like a fool.--'Tis my comfort, however, I am not an obstinate one: therefore

I define a nose as follows--intreating only beforehand, and beseeching my readers, both male and female, of what age, complexion, and condition soever, for the love of God and their own souls, to guard against the temptations and suggestions of the devil, and suffer him by no art or wile to put any other ideas into their minds, than what I put into my definition--For by the word Nose, throughout all this long chapter of noses, and in every other part of my work, where the word Nose occurs--I declare, by that word I mean a nose, and nothing more, or less.

Chapter 2.XXV.