| The first excerpt represents the past or something you must release, and is drawn from Michael Strogoff by Jules Verne: going too far, it passes all limits and --"
"Now do be quiet, my dear sir. When you are done
up, I will take your place; and call me a broken-winded
snail and faint-hearted tortoise if I don't take you over the
ground at a rattling pace."
Alcide said all this with such perfect good-humor that
Michael could not help smiling. "Gentlemen," said he,
"here is a better plan. We have now reached the highest
ridge of the Ural chain, and thus have merely to descend
the slopes of the mountain. My carriage is close by, only
two hundred yards behind. I will lend you one of my
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The second excerpt represents the present or the deciding factor of the moment, and is drawn from Malbone: An Oldport Romance by Thomas Wentworth Higginson: Hope's face but a sort of stony calmness, which put her
infinitely farther from Malbone than had the momentary
struggle. As he gave the girlish form into arms that shook and
trembled beneath its weight, he caught a glimpse in the
pier-glass of their two white faces, and then, looking down,
saw the rose-tints yet lingering on Emilia's cheek. She, the
source of all this woe, looked the only representative of
innocence between two guilty things.
How white and pure and maidenly looked Hope's little
room,--such a home of peace, he thought, till its door suddenly
opened to admit all this passion and despair! There was a great
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The third excerpt represents the future or something you must embrace, and is drawn from The War in the Air by H. G. Wells: American.
He made the war.
Quite equally with the rest of the world, the general German
population was taken by surprise by the swift vigour of the
Imperial government. A considerable literature of military
forecasts, beginning as early as 1906 with Rudolf Martin, the
author not merely of a brilliant book of anticipations, but of a
proverb, "The future of Germany lies in the air," had, however,
partially prepared the German imagination for some such
enterprise.
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