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Today's Stichomancy for Clyde Barrow

The first excerpt represents the past or something you must release, and is drawn from The Market-Place by Harold Frederic:

had a bag full of photographs of an actress all eyes and teeth and hair,--and another chap had a scheme all worked out for getting a concession from Spain for one of the Caroline Islands, and putting up a factory there for making porpoise-hide leather.

"Then there were three inventors--let's see, here they are--one with a coiled wire spring for scissors inside a pocket-knife, and one with a bottle, the whole top of which unscrews instead of having a cork or stopper, and one with an electrical fish-line, a fine wire inside the silk, you know, which connects with some battery


The Market-Place
The second excerpt represents the present or the deciding factor of the moment, and is drawn from Criminal Sociology by Enrico Ferri:

measures to be taken against crime are of two kinds, preventive and eliminative, 61--The fluctuations of crime chiefly produced by social causes, 61--Steadiness of the graver forms of crime, 63-- Effect of judicial procedure on criminal statistics, 64--Crimes against the person are high when crimes against property are low, 64--Is crime increasing or decreasing? 64--Official optimism in criminal statistics, 67--Density of population and crime, 73-- Conditions on which the fluctuations of crime depend, 77-- Quetelet's law of the mechanical regularity of crime, 80--The effect of environment on crime, 81--The effect of punishment on crime, 82--The value of punishment is over-estimated, 82--

The third excerpt represents the future or something you must embrace, and is drawn from Men of Iron by Howard Pyle:

the usual size --sixty paces long--and separated along its whole length by a barrier about five feet high. Upon the west side of the course and about twenty paces distant from it, a scaffolding had been built facing towards the east so as to avoid the glare of the afternoon sun. In the centre was a raised dais, hung round with cloth of blue embroidered with lions rampant. Upon the dais stood a cushioned throne for the King, and upon the steps below, ranged in the order of their dignity, were seats for the Earl, his guests, the family, the ladies, knights, and gentlemen of the castle. In front, the scaffolding was covered with the gayest tapestries and brightest-colored hangings that the castle could


Men of Iron