Mr. Villarreal takes his title from N.V. Krogius' Chess Psychology. On doubt: [For the player] “the fully acceptable variation seems... not quite strong enough, he wants... something still more effective”; aka, the "illusory chase,” — “chasing the bluebird”. Mr. Villarreal proceeds to paint the American Dream as a "chase" where one risks falling away from life. In chess, the clock is always ticking; so, in real life. But is this verifiable? Yes; for, perfecting the human in us all is like trying to perfect God! —it’s a lottery few of us ever win.
“It stands quiet in its domain, in the stellar part of the universe, apart and distant, arbiter which it is on the state of the world―
(It sings, and it calls, and then, scurries away into the perfect edge of day!)”
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