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Sure. To Mrs. Wendel. 128 I said:I catch. This trick you played. I waited until they were gone, then called Lester and said: Does she look crazy to you? And how long was it after that when you saw the boat burst into flames? Where will you be going first? I asked. Gulli...? Virtus dormitiva, Buck stayed with his martinis, but I ordered a full bottle of Chardonnay, and poured for my sister and Jessie, and then for myself. We toasted again, this time to celebrate the news that Bucks work would be exhibited n a Kennebunkport gallery this coming summer. Crandalls his lawyer, same as he’s the lawyer for most of the money men in town. Crandall’s good I guess; I don’t know him. Should I come along? After all, Im Tod’s friend. And got exactly nowhere, Joey Free put in. Ruths living at her lawyer’s house and the cops don’t want any part of him. He’s some big shot named Crandall; a pretty smart egg, I hear. So there was nothing else to do but go on a bat. Toddy was pretty low and my shiner and the bruisesI’ve got to jigger with gave me an excuse. We put on a pip, Shean. Yes —oui. It wont start. The battery is flat. Do you by chance have a charger? Or jump leads?’ It had fallen off the wall. But how the hell could it have fallen? She dropped the pose the moment they were man and wife. That first year of their marriage, Gussie— we were still calling her Gussie back then — found some excuse to refuse, on behalf of herself, my brother, and her two delightful little girls, my mothers invitation to Grandma Rozalia’s traditional Passover seder. Mind you, my mother’s not religious. But Passover was important to Mom, as it was to all us kids when we were growing up, and still is, even now that Grandma Rozalia is dead. I wasn’t married to Maggie the first time Augusta became a seder no-show, but in later years, even though she’s not Jewish, Maggie attended each and every one of them, including the ones at my mother’s house after Grandma died. In fact, Maggie told me she actually enjoyed them. Theyre waiting to shake hands with you, Dr. Dixon said, his shrewd eyes studying the young man’s face. They want to congratulate you, and make something of a hero of you. These precautions are inapplicable to such cases as we are now considering. The mercury of our experiment being tried with an unknown multitude (or even let it be a known multitude) of other influencing circumstances, the mere fact of their being influencing circumstances implies that they disguise the effect of the mercury, and preclude us from knowing whether it has any effect or not. Unless we already knew what and how much is owing to every other circumstance (that is, unless we suppose the very problem solved which we are considering the means of solving), we can not tell that those other circumstances may not have produced the whole of the effect, independently or even in spite of the mercury. The Method of Difference, in the ordinary mode of its use, namely, by comparing the state of things following the experiment with the state which preceded it, is thus, in the case of intermixture of effects, entirely unavailing; because other causes than that whose effect we are seeking to determine have been operating during the transition. As for the other mode of employing the Method of Difference, namely, by comparing, not the same case at two different periods, but different cases, this in the present instance is quite chimerical. In phenomena so complicated it is questionable if two cases, similar in all respects but one, ever occurred; and were they to occur, we could not possibly know that they were so exactly similar. The actions and feelings of human beings in the social state, are, no doubt, entirely governed by psychological and ethological laws: whatever influence any cause exercises upon the social phenomena, it exercises through those laws. Supposing therefore the laws of human actions and feelings to be sufficiently known, there is no extraordinary difficulty in determining from those laws, the nature of the social effects which any given cause tends to produce. But when the question is that of compounding several tendencies together, and computing the aggregate result of many co-existent causes; and especially when, by attempting to predict what will actually occur in a given case, we incur the obligation of estimating and compounding the influences of all the causes which happen to exist in that case, we attempt a task to proceed far in which, surpasses the compass of the human faculties..