The third excerpt represents the element of Water. It speaks of pure spiritual influences and feelings of love, and is drawn from The Foolish Virgin by Thomas Dixon: "Will I need these, too?" she asked incredulously.
"Will you!" he cried. "You wouldn't ask
that question if you knew the horse we've got
hitched to this benzine buggy today. He's got wings--
believe me! It's all I can do to hold him on the
ground sometimes."
"You'll drive carefully?" she faltered.
He lifted his hand.
"With you settin' beside me, my first name's
`Caution.'"
She fumbled the goggles in a vain effort to lift
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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 The Economist by Xenophon: sweetest scent and fairest show all things wherewith to adorn the
altars and statues of the gods, or deck man's person. It is to her we
owe our many delicacies of flesh or fowl or vegetable growth;[4] since
with the tillage of the soil is closely linked the art of breeding
sheep and cattle, whereby we mortals may offer sacrifices well
pleasing to the gods, and satisfy our personal needs withal.
[1] Lit. "Not even the most blessed of mankind can abstain from." See
Plat. "Rep." 344 B, "The superlatively best and well-to-do."
[2] Lit. "Devotion to it would seem to be at once a kind of luxury, an
increase of estate, a training of the bodily parts, so that a man
is able to perform all that a free man should."
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