| The third excerpt represents the element of Water. It speaks of pure spiritual influences and feelings of love, and is drawn from Men of Iron by Howard Pyle: fell. Till then, as thou art an honest man, trouble her not. Now
get thee gone.
As Myles crossed the dark and silent courtyards, and looked up at
the clear, still twinkle of the stars, he felt a kind of dull
wonder that they and the night and the world should seem so much
the same, and he be so different.
The first stroke had been given that was to break in pieces his
boyhood life--the second was soon to follow.
CHAPTER 21
There are now and then times in the life of every one when new
and strange things occur with such rapidity that one has hardly
 Men of Iron |
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 Island Nights' Entertainments by Robert Louis Stevenson: At that Kalamake turned, and if he had run before, now he flew.
But fast as he ran, the leaves burned faster. The flame was ready
to expire when, with a great leap, he bounded on the mat. The wind
of his leaping blew it out; and with that the beach was gone, and
the sun and the sea, and they stood once more in the dimness of the
shuttered parlour, and were once more shaken and blinded; and on
the mat betwixt them lay a pile of shining dollars. Keola ran to
the shutters; and there was the steamer tossing in the swell close
in.
The same night Kalamake took his son-in-law apart, and gave him
five dollars in his hand.
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