The scene opens with the lantern-making party in the middle of the night. The two young men are making lanterns for the festival that is to take place the next day. The narrator tells the young men that he has come to apologize to them for the wrongs they have done to each other. He tells them that they are sisters and that they can now enjoy each other's company. He then tells them to go to the festival and enjoy the show together. The young men ask why they are not allowed to walk around the city, and the narrator explains that they have come to see the lantern show. He also tells the men that the woman has gone, and that the brother has not come because it is the place where they fell in love, but because he wants to see her again. He says that he hopes that their targets are not different, because he hopes they will not be the same.
The scene opens with the lantern-making party in the middle of the night. The two young men are making lanterns for the festival that is to take place the next day. The narrator tells the young men that he has come to apologize to them for the wrongs they have done to each other. He tells them that they are sisters and that they can now enjoy each other's company. He then tells them to go to the festival and enjoy the show together. The young men ask why they are not allowed to walk around the city, and the narrator explains that they have come to see the lantern show. He also tells the men that the woman has gone, and that the brother has not come because it is the place where they fell in love, but because he wants to see her again. He says that he hopes that their targets are not different, because he hopes they will not be the same.