| The first excerpt represents the past or something you must release, and is drawn from The Magic of Oz by L. Frank Baum: can't escape them."
"If they hold off long enough, I'll have my raft ready," said Cap'n Bill.
"What are you going to do with a raft?" inquired the beast.
"We're goin' over to that island, to get the Magic Flower."
The huge beast looked at him in surprise a moment, and then it began
to laugh. The laugh was a good deal like a roar, and it had a cruel
and derisive sound, but it was a laugh nevertheless.
"Good!" said the Kalidah. "Good! Very good! I'm glad you're going
to get the Magic Flower. But what will you do with it?"
"We're going to take it to Ozma, as a present on her birthday."
The Kalidah laughed again; then it became sober. "If you get to the
 The Magic of Oz |
The second excerpt represents the present or the deciding factor of the moment, and is drawn from Twilight Land by Howard Pyle: "Did you not tell me that you had but three sons, and is this not
a fourth?"
It was of no use for the old man to tell the officer that the
youth was not his son, but was a prince who had come to visit
that country. The officer drew forth his tablets and wrote
something upon them, and then went his way, leaving the old man
sighing and groaning. "Ah, me!" said he, "my heart sadly
forebodes trouble."
Sure enough, before three days had passed a bidding came to the
prince to make ready to sup with the queen that night.
When evening drew near a troop of horsemen came, bringing a white
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The third excerpt represents the future or something you must embrace, and is drawn from The Land that Time Forgot by Edgar Rice Burroughs: the blood-lust and the thirst to slay; but not one whit less did
it fill me with the same primal passions. Two abysmal beasts
sprang at each other's throats that day beneath the shadow of
earth's oldest cliffs--the man of now and the man-thing of the
earliest, forgotten then, imbued by the same deathless passion
that has come down unchanged through all the epochs, periods and
eras of time from the beginning, and which shall continue to the
incalculable end--woman, the imperishable Alpha and Omega of life.
Kho closed and sought my jugular with his teeth. He seemed to
forget the hatchet dangling by its aurochs-hide thong at his hip,
as I forgot, for the moment, the dagger in my hand. And I doubt
 The Land that Time Forgot |