This chapter's epigraph is from a famous poem by Shmoop. It's about a guy who's been reborn as a great god, and he's going to kill all the guards of Onikura's shrine. The poem's title comes from a line in the poem that says, "I am reborn to be the god of the mountains. I am reborn into the world of the gods, and the gods are reborn into me. The line is a reference to the fact that the gods have been reborn in the past, and that they're going to be reborn again in the future. This is a quote from the poem itself, which is about a man who has been reborn into a god. The man's name is Lin-wutian. He's the youngest martial arts master in the world, and Lin-Wutian has only been in the martial arts for two years. The guy's got a lot of potential, but he hasn't yet shown himself to be a cultivator of the divine realm. The dude's not even in the "divine realm" yet, so he needs to figure out a way to get to the "gods" in the next chapter.
This chapter's epigraph is from a famous poem by Shmoop. It's about a guy who's been reborn as a great god, and he's going to kill all the guards of Onikura's shrine. The poem's title comes from a line in the poem that says, "I am reborn to be the god of the mountains. I am reborn into the world of the gods, and the gods are reborn into me. The line is a reference to the fact that the gods have been reborn in the past, and that they're going to be reborn again in the future. This is a quote from the poem itself, which is about a man who has been reborn into a god. The man's name is Lin-wutian. He's the youngest martial arts master in the world, and Lin-Wutian has only been in the martial arts for two years. The guy's got a lot of potential, but he hasn't yet shown himself to be a cultivator of the divine realm. The dude's not even in the "divine realm" yet, so he needs to figure out a way to get to the "gods" in the next chapter.