| The third excerpt represents the element of Water. It speaks of pure spiritual influences and feelings of love, and is drawn from The Exiles by Honore de Balzac: graceful shrub that has grown from the hollow trunk of some gnarled
willow, withered by age, blasted by lightning, standing decrepit; one
of those majestic trees that painters love; the trembling sapling
takes shelter there from storms. One was a god, the other was an
angel; one the poet that feels, the other the poet that expresses--a
prophet in sorrow, a levite in prayer.
They went out together without speaking.
"Did you mark how he called him to him?" cried the sergeant of the
watch when the footsteps of the couple were no longer audible on the
strand. "Are not they a demon and his familiar?"
"Phooh!" puffed Jacqueline. "I felt smothered! I never marked our two
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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 Caesar's Commentaries in Latin by Julius Caesar: possessionis culmina Alpium oceupare conari et ea loca finitimae
provinciae adiungere sibi persuasum habebant.
His nuntiis acceptis Galba, cum neque opus hibernorum munitionesque
plene essent perfectae neque de frumento reliquoque commeatu satis esset
provisum quod deditione facta obsidibusque acceptis nihil de bello
timendum existimaverat, consilio celeriter convocato sententias exquirere
coepit. Quo in consilio, cum tantum repentini periculi praeter opinionem
accidisset ac iam omnia fere superiora loca multitudine armatorum completa
conspicerentur neque subsidio veniri neque commeatus supportari
interclusis itineribus possent, prope iam desperata salute non nullae eius
modi sententiae dicebantur, ut impedimentis relictis eruptione facta isdem
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