This chapter's epigraph is from a poem by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, entitled "Invisible Man." In this poem, Longfellow describes a man who is invisible to the naked eye, but who is able to see through the skin of the naked man. In this case, the invisible man is Henry xianzi, the son of the founder of the New World Order. He is also the heir to the throne of the Old World Order, a position that he inherited from his father. Henry's father, who died when Henry was a young boy, was a great patriot, a patriot who fought against the French and the British in World War I. He was also a great soldier, a soldier who fought in the Spanish Civil War, and a soldier in the American Civil War. Henry is also a good friend of his father's, and the two men share a love for one another.
This chapter's epigraph is from a poem by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, entitled "Invisible Man." In this poem, Longfellow describes a man who is invisible to the naked eye, but who is able to see through the skin of the naked man. In this case, the invisible man is Henry xianzi, the son of the founder of the New World Order. He is also the heir to the throne of the Old World Order, a position that he inherited from his father. Henry's father, who died when Henry was a young boy, was a great patriot, a patriot who fought against the French and the British in World War I. He was also a great soldier, a soldier who fought in the Spanish Civil War, and a soldier in the American Civil War. Henry is also a good friend of his father's, and the two men share a love for one another.