The last of the four, "Air," represents this element in two totally different ways; the one on the left gives the more tender, gentle movement of this element, in the suggestion of the scent of the bowmen screened by trees, moving toward their prospective prey, while the other very bold composition is of a windmill turned away from the destructive power of an impending windstorm.
"The Art of the Exposition"
Eugen Neuhaus
The next windstorm would have covered it up, and all that afterward happened never would have occurred.
"Howard Pyle's Book of Pirates"
Howard I. Pyle
The last three words were lost, for Captain Warrington had turned into a thunderbolt and disappeared; the noise of his going was as when a sudden windstorm slams all the doors at once.
"Winds of the World"
Talbot Mundy