| The first excerpt represents the element of Air. It speaks of mental influences and the process of thought, and is drawn from The Pool in the Desert by Sara Jeanette Duncan: made me ask her?'
'Oh, she'll have recovered by then. You must make allowance for the
shock we gave her, poor dear. Consider how you would feel if Lady
Worsley suddenly appeared upon the scene, and demanded devotion from
Sir Frank.'
'She wouldn't get it,' Mrs. Mickie dimpled candidly. 'Frank always
loses his heart and his conscience at the same time. But you don't
suppose there's anything serious in this affair? Pure pretty
platonics, I should call it.'
Mrs. Gammidge lifted her eyebrows. 'I dare say that is what they
imagine it. Well, they're never in the same room for two minutes
|
The second excerpt represents the element of Fire. It speaks of emotional influences and base passions, and is drawn from Men of Iron by Howard Pyle: upon him, refused to restore the estates of Falworth and
Easterbridge--the latter of which had again reverted to the crown
upon the death of the Earl of Alban without issue--upon the
grounds that they had been forfeited not because of the attaint
of treason, but because of Lord Falworth having refused to
respond to the citation of the courts. So the business dragged
along for month after month, until in January the King died
suddenly in the Jerusalem Chamber at Westminster. Then matters
went smoothly enough, and Falworth and Mackworth swam upon the
flood-tide of fortune.
So Myles was married, for how else should the story end? And one
 Men of Iron |