Stories from the Old Attic

	

"Wait," said a third.  "This gentleman's bucket is all right, but I 
think I should be allowed to help bail, since I am a fellow passenger."

Everyone adduced many weighty, true, and worthy philosophical 
arguments for his position, and cited laws, ethics, and political 
and procedural rules, but no person succeeded in convincing any 
other.  Soon, therefore, the discussion ceased to remain at this 
level, but grew rather heated, and shouts and aspersions began to 
fill the air, with perhaps even a trace of ill will.

"I refuse to allow anyone to bail this boat unless he uses this 
bucket, which, as any fool can see, is the only true bucket, clearly 
superior to all others," screamed one.

"And I absolutely refuse to see this boat bailed unless I can take part 
in the work," yelled another.

Now these passengers all had some interest in seeing the boat bailed, 
and most hoped that this impasse could be overcome to the 
satisfaction of everyone.  But since no one knew exactly what to 
do, nothing was done.

"Perhaps we will get to the enchanted island without bailing the 
boat," hoped one.

It was not to be so.  While the travelers continued to debate, some 
suggesting unworkable alternatives and the others remaining 
unyielding, the boat continued to fill, until at one sudden and 
horrifying moment, the water rushed in over the gunwales and across 
the deck.  The hold filled rapidly, and in spite of every man's 
frenzied efforts, the boat sank, carrying the stubborn but now 
too-late-repentant travelers, together with their screaming wives 
and virgin daughters, to the very bottom of the sea.



The Limit

One day a man was walking through a forest and got lost.  "Nothing 
could be worse than this," he said.  Then it got dark.  "Lost in 
the dark.  What could be worse?" he asked.  Then it got cold.  
"Now nothing could possibly be worse," he said as he shivered and 
stumbled around.  But then it began to rain.  "How could anything 
be worse than this?" he asked himself.  But then the rain turned 	
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