he wind. It's a mover of trees and dust and clouds, and landscapes and seasons. Its origins are as unknown as it's endings. It symbolizes a pillar of life itself...Change. Yet, if it is held or constrained, it's essence is lost, and it becomes merely air.
n this scene, two young boys are experiencing a fleeting moment as three horses thunder by and a fourth approaches. It's a moment onto which they'd like to hold, but this moment, like the wind, must pass. For who can constrain a moment, and "Who Can Grasp the Four Winds"?