This chapter's epigraph is from a poem by Dr. Bledsoe. It's about a man who has a strong cultivation system, but he's not strong enough to destroy his enemy. The poem's title refers to the fact that the man's cultivation system is stronger than his enemy's. The man is the strongest of all the men in the room, and he is the one who has the strongest cultivation system. The other men are all weak, and the man is weak too. He's the only one who can kill the man, and that's it. The next morning, the man wakes up and tells his brother that his enemy has killed him. The two men are shocked, because they thought the man was going to kill them. The doctor tells the man that he can't do anything about it, because the man has been infected with love sickness. He says that if the man wants to kill him, he should just give him the poison and let the man be bitten by the bug. The physician says that he'll give the poison to the man as long as he doesn't have love sickness, and then he can use it to heal him.
This chapter's epigraph is from a poem by Dr. Bledsoe. It's about a man who has a strong cultivation system, but he's not strong enough to destroy his enemy. The poem's title refers to the fact that the man's cultivation system is stronger than his enemy's. The man is the strongest of all the men in the room, and he is the one who has the strongest cultivation system. The other men are all weak, and the man is weak too. He's the only one who can kill the man, and that's it. The next morning, the man wakes up and tells his brother that his enemy has killed him. The two men are shocked, because they thought the man was going to kill them. The doctor tells the man that he can't do anything about it, because the man has been infected with love sickness. He says that if the man wants to kill him, he should just give him the poison and let the man be bitten by the bug. The physician says that he'll give the poison to the man as long as he doesn't have love sickness, and then he can use it to heal him.