The chapter opens with a discussion of the battle between the flying eagle and the qing cheng sword factions. The chapter's epigraph is a quote from a famous poem by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. Longfellow's poem is about a young boy who is about to be killed by his father's sword. The boy's name is Henry, and the poem's title refers to the fact that Henry's father is a member of the Flying Eagle gang. The poem also refers to Henry as a young man who has just been killed by a sword. In the poem, the young man is described as a "young man" who has been killed "by a sword." The young man's identity is not revealed, but it is implied that he is the son of a wealthy and powerful man.
The chapter opens with a discussion of the battle between the flying eagle and the qing cheng sword factions. The chapter's epigraph is a quote from a famous poem by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. Longfellow's poem is about a young boy who is about to be killed by his father's sword. The boy's name is Henry, and the poem's title refers to the fact that Henry's father is a member of the Flying Eagle gang. The poem also refers to Henry as a young man who has just been killed by a sword. In the poem, the young man is described as a "young man" who has been killed "by a sword." The young man's identity is not revealed, but it is implied that he is the son of a wealthy and powerful man.