| The first excerpt represents the element of Air. It speaks of mental influences and the process of thought, and is drawn from Gone With the Wind by Margaret Mitchell: your pa. I won't have you lightin' into Suellen. What she's done,
she's done, and you snatchin' her baldheaded won't bring Mr. O'Hara
back. Besides she honestly thought she was actin' for the best!"
"I wanted to ask you about that. What is all this about Suellen?
Alex talked riddles and said she ought to be whipped. What has she
done?"
"Yes, folks are pretty riled up about her. Everybody I run into
this afternoon in Jonesboro was promisin' to cut her dead the next
time they seen her, but maybe they'll get over it. Now, promise me
you won't light into her. I won't be havin' no quarrelin' tonight
with Mr. O'Hara layin' dead in the parlor."
 Gone With the Wind |
The second excerpt represents the element of Fire. It speaks of emotional influences and base passions, and is drawn from The Odyssey by Homer: sitting at the same board; yea, and even if a wayfarer
going all alone has met with them, they use no disguise,
since we are near of kin to them, even as are the Cyclopes
and the wild tribes of the Giants.'
And Odysseus of many counsels answered him, saying:
'Alcinous, that thought be far from thee! for I bear no
likeness either in form or fashion to the deathless gods,
who keep wide heaven, but to men that die. Whomsoever ye
know of human kind the heaviest laden with sorrow, to them
might I liken myself in my griefs. Yea, and I might tell of
yet other woes, even the long tale of toil that by the
 The Odyssey |