
"It would seem to me," said Ghost, "that this would be a fertile field for some Time investigation. Apparently there were many different kinds of these-would you call them primates?"
"I think you might," said Maxwell.
"Primates of a different stripe than the apes and man."
"Of a very different stripe," said Oop. "Vicious little stinkers."
"Someday, I'm sure," said Carol, "Time will get around to it. They know it, of course?"
"They should," said Oop. "I've told them often enough, with appropriate description."
"Time has too much to do," Maxwell reminded them. "Too many areas of interest. And the entire past to cover."
"And no money to do it with," said Carol.
"There," declared Maxwell, "speaks a loyal Time staff member."
"But it's true," she cried. "The other disciplines could learn so much by Time investigation. You can't rely on written history. It turns out, in many cases, to be different than it actually was. A matter of emphasis or bias or of just poor interpretation, embalmed forever in the written form. But do these other departments provide any funds for Time investigation? I'll answer that. They don't. A few of them, of course. The College of Law has cooperated splendidly, but not many of the others. They're afraid. They don't want their comfortable little worlds upset. Take this matter of Shakespeare, for example. You'd think English Lit would be grateful to find that Oxford wrote the plays. After all, it had been a question that had been talked about for many years-who really wrote the plays? But, after all of that, they resented it when Time found out who really wrote the plays."
"And now," said Maxwell, "Time is bringing Shakespeare forward to lecture about how he didn't write the plays. Don't you think that's rubbing it in just a bit too much?"
