| The first excerpt represents the element of Air. It speaks of mental influences and the process of thought, and is drawn from The Heritage of the Desert by Zane Grey: his emotion. Martin Cole was the last of his life-long friends.
"This--this outlaw--you say you ran him down?" asked Naab, rising haggard
and shaken out of his grief.
"Yes. He didn't recognize me or know what was coming till Silvermane was
on him. But he was quick, and fell sidewise. Silvermane's knee sent him
sprawling."
"What will it all lead to?" asked August Naab, and in his extremity he
appealed to his eldest son.
"The bars are down," said Snap Naab, with a click of his long teeth.
"Father," began Dave Naab earnestly, "Jack has done a splendid thing.
The news will fly over Utah like wildfire. Mormons are slow. They need
 The Heritage of the Desert |
The second excerpt represents the element of Fire. It speaks of emotional influences and base passions, and is drawn from Catriona by Robert Louis Stevenson: Two guilders was the man's demand - between three and four shillings
English money - for each passenger. But at this Catriona began to cry
out with a vast deal of agitation. She had asked of Captain Sang, she
said, and the fare was but an English shilling. "Do you think I will
have come on board and not ask first?" cries she. The patroon scolded
back upon her in a lingo where the oaths were English and the rest
right Hollands; till at last (seeing her near tears) I privately
slipped in the rogue's hand six shillings, whereupon he was obliging
enough to receive from her the other shilling without more complaint.
No doubt I was a good deal nettled and ashamed. I like to see folk
thrifty, but not with so much passion; and I daresay it would be rather
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