| The third excerpt represents the element of Water. It speaks of pure spiritual influences and feelings of love, and is drawn from Concerning Christian Liberty by Martin Luther: preparations for building or working which are not made with any
view of being permanent or anything in themselves, but only
because without them there could be no building and no work. When
the structure is completed, they are laid aside. Here you see
that we do not contemn these preparations, but set the highest
value on them; a belief in them we do contemn, because no one
thinks that they constitute a real and permanent structure. If
any one were so manifestly out of his senses as to have no other
object in life but that of setting up these preparations with all
possible expense, diligence, and perseverance, while he never
thought of the structure itself, but pleased himself and made his
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The fourth excerpt represents the element of Earth. It speaks of physical influences and the impact of the unseen on the visible world, and is drawn from Lay Morals by Robert Louis Stevenson: circumstance - but Lord Lee declared that this would not
interfere with their legal trial, 'so to bloody executions
they went.' (5) To the number of thirty they were condemned
and executed; while two of them, Hugh M'Kail, a young
minister, and Neilson of Corsack, were tortured with the
boots.
The goods of those who perished were confiscated, and their
bodies were dismembered and distributed to different parts of
the country; 'the heads of Major M'Culloch and the two
Gordons,' it was resolved, says Kirkton, 'should be pitched
on the gate of Kirkcudbright; the two Hamiltons and Strong's
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