        item: #1 of 12
          id: 17028
      author: Doctorow, Cory
       title: Eastern Standard Tribe
        date: None
       words: 55755
      flesch: 88
     summary: Riding him and then being ridden in turns, slurping and wet and energetic until they both lay sprawled on the hotel room's very nice Persian rugs, dehydrated and panting and Art commed Fede, and Fede told him it could take a couple weeks to sort things out, and why didn't he and Linda rent a car and do some sight-seeing on the East Coast? Art's earliest memory: a dream.
    keywords: art; ass; audie; bed; book; boston; car; colonelonic; comm; couple; course; day; doctor; door; eyes; face; fede; friends; fucking; gink; good; gran; hand; head; hell; jersey; job; junta; license; linda; london; look; mom; moment; need; new; office; people; right; roof; room; shit; shut; sir; sorry; story; stuff; talk; thanks; thing; thought; time; trepan; tribe; use; way; week; work; world; years
       cache: 17028.txt
  plain text: 17028.txt

        item: #2 of 12
          id: 17759
      author: International Meridian Conference (1884 : Washington, D.C.)
       title: International Conference Held at Washington for the Purpose of Fixing a Prime Meridian and a Universal Day. October, 1884. Protocols of the Proceedings
        date: None
       words: 67787
      flesch: 56
     summary: The basis of Mr. Gyldén's system is that time meridians should be separated from the standard initial meridian by either 10 or some integral multiple of 10 minutes. Greenwich time is exclusively used in Great Britain, and differs from mean local time about eight minutes on the east and about twenty-two and a half minutes on the west.
    keywords: adoption; britain; conference; congress; day; delegate; france; general; greenwich; longitude; meridian; meridian conference; point; present; president; prime meridian; question; reckoning; resolution; states; subject; system; time; united; united states; universal; vote; west; world
       cache: 17759.txt
  plain text: 17759.txt

        item: #3 of 12
          id: 27053
      author: Repp, Ed Earl
       title: The Day Time Stopped Moving
        date: None
       words: 6162
      flesch: 93
     summary: THE DAY TIME STOPPED MOVING By BRADNER BUCKNER _All Dave Miller wanted to do was commit suicide in peace. Dave Miller would never have done it, had he been in his right mind.
    keywords: dave; erickson; eyes; helen; major; miller; right; time; way
       cache: 27053.txt
  plain text: 27053.txt

        item: #4 of 12
          id: 31663
      author: Lafferty, R. A.
       title: The Six Fingers of Time
        date: None
       words: 9823
      flesch: 89
     summary: You had not imagined that there were only two phases of time, had you? Lately I have come to suspect that there are many more, said Charles Vincent. And there was a taxi which crept along, but Charles Vincent had to look at it carefully for some time to be sure that it was in motion.
    keywords: charles; clock; hand; hour; man; minutes; people; state; time; vincent; work
       cache: 31663.txt
  plain text: 31663.txt

        item: #5 of 12
          id: 32905
      author: Ernst, Paul
       title: Mask of Death
        date: None
       words: 11050
      flesch: 90
     summary: A weird and uncanny tale about a strange criminal who called himself Doctor Satan, and the terrible doom with which he struck down his enemies_] _1. The signature was: Doctor Satan! _2.
    keywords: bay; blue; chichester; doctor; eyes; keane; madame; man; room; satan; sin; weems
       cache: 32905.txt
  plain text: 32905.txt

        item: #6 of 12
          id: 44838
      author: Arthur, James
       title: Time and Its Measurement
        date: None
       words: 22399
      flesch: 75
     summary: The above table shows the variation of the sun from mean or clock time, by even minutes. One rotation of the earth in 23 hours, 56 minutes and 4 seconds, nearly, of clock time. 3rd.
    keywords: clock; date; day; days; dial; earth; fig; half; hand; hours; illustration; japanese; line; night; noon; point; seconds; sun; time; watch; watches; year
       cache: 44838.txt
  plain text: 44838.txt

        item: #7 of 12
          id: 44867
      author: Wells, H. G. (Herbert George)
       title: The Discovery of the Future
        date: None
       words: 9597
      flesch: 58
     summary: All this world is heavy with the promise of greater things, and a day will come, one day in the unending succession of days, when beings, beings who are now latent in our thoughts and hidden in our loins, shall stand upon this earth as one stands upon a footstool, and shall laugh and reach out their hands amid the stars. And now, if it has been possible for men by picking out a number of suggestive and significant looking things in the present, by comparing them, criticising them, and discussing them, with a perpetual insistence upon Why? without any guiding tradition, and indeed in the teeth of established beliefs, to construct this amazing searchlight of inference into the remoter past, is it really, after all, such an extravagant and hopeless thing to suggest that, by seeking for operating causes instead of for fossils, and by criticising them as persistently and thoroughly as the geological record has been criticised, it may be possible to throw a searchlight of inference forward instead of backward, and to attain to a knowledge of coming things as clear, as universally convincing, and infinitely more important to mankind than the clear vision of the past that geology has opened to us during the nineteenth century? Let us grant that anything to correspond with the memory, anything having the same relation to the future that memory has to the past, is out of the question.
    keywords: day; future; human; knowledge; man; mind; past; people; present; sort; things; world
       cache: 44867.txt
  plain text: 44867.txt

        item: #8 of 12
          id: 49462
      author: Smith, E. E. (Edward Elmer)
       title: Lord Tedric
        date: None
       words: 11025
      flesch: 88
     summary: Nor, if you did, couldst know who it was neath all this iron? Art wrong, Lord Tedric--nay, not 'Lord' Tedric; henceforth you and I are Tedric and Rhoann merely--I have known you long and well; would recognize you anywhere. * * * King Phagon and Tedric were standing at a table in the throne-room of the palace-castle, studying a map.
    keywords: god; gold; king; like; llosir; lomarr; lord; phagon; rhoann; sciro; sire; tedric; time; tis
       cache: 49462.txt
  plain text: 49462.txt

        item: #9 of 12
          id: 49651
      author: Smith, E. E. (Edward Elmer)
       title: Tedric
        date: None
       words: 7882
      flesch: 87
     summary: No priestess I, Lord Tedric! By Llosir's brain, girl, you're right--you've been wasted long enough! The key figure is Lord Tedric of Lomarr, the discoverer of the carburization of steel.
    keywords: god; good; iron; llosir; lord; man; metal; sarpedion; sword; tedric; time
       cache: 49651.txt
  plain text: 49651.txt

        item: #10 of 12
          id: 59515
      author: Fontenay, Charles L.
       title: Z
        date: None
       words: 8825
      flesch: 87
     summary: I'm Summer Storm and this is my husband, Wyn Storm, and we live at 138 March Street, she said, all in a rush. Does this explain, the strange co-existence of Summer, Mark and Wyn?_
    keywords: house; know; mark; past; storm; summer; thomas; time; wyn; years
       cache: 59515.txt
  plain text: 59515.txt

        item: #11 of 12
          id: 59712
      author: Walton, Bryce
       title: The Floater
        date: None
       words: 5248
      flesch: 86
     summary: Barton couldn't figure out why they were so concerned, especially the neuropsychologist or whatever he was, Von Ulrich, who was always coming around in his clinical space boat, studying Barton, asking him questions, giving him all kinds of tests. A few months later, Von Ulrich was back, watching Barton moulding something out of clay, a sort of human shape without a face.
    keywords: barton; basketball; sir; time; ulrich; von
       cache: 59712.txt
  plain text: 59712.txt

        item: #12 of 12
          id: 9252
      author: Hawthorne, Nathaniel
       title: Time's Portraiture (From: "The Doliver Romance and Other Pieces: Tales and Sketches")
        date: None
       words: 3028
      flesch: 69
     summary: If you would meet Time face to face, you have only to promenade in Essex Street, between the hours of twelve and one; and there, among beaux and belles, you will see old Father Time, apparently the gayest of the gay. Wherefore I have bethought me, that it might not displease your worships to hear a few particulars about the person and habits of Father Time, with whom, as being one of his errand-boys, I have more acquaintance than most lads of my years.
    keywords: day; face; gentleman; hour; street; time; year
       cache: 9252.txt
  plain text: 9252.txt

