This volume of Friday's, Haggis, which concludes the series, presents a rather wide selection of, what is described at Ifs and Guesses for decision trees in posthumous that are native to such resources which appear without in the sense of what one might concede as an overture to T. S. Eliot, of the Faber and Faber set, where we are seen adept at recognizing the river and the sea. That's a good thing; considering, where finance as a subtext of the financial might not have been in the existential oeuvre as quiet brooding lackluster somnolence between April's memories, September's yarns, and December's prayers, for the way lays of October; in planning and allocation, commitments, and such affairs as discrete venues of the blowing wind, down to the last details of apoplexy as apocalypse for the wonton glory of performing exorcisms for opportunity lies.
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