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Legend of Phoenix

Legend of Phoenix • Chapter 80: One Should Not Take an Exam on an Empty Stomach, This Is a Serious Matter That Has to Be Addressed • Page ik-page-4351162
Chapter 80: One Should Not Take an Exam on an Empty Stomach, This Is a Serious Matter That Has to Be Addressed
This is a locked chapterChapter 80: One Should Not Take an Exam on an Empty Stomach, This Is a Serious Matter That Has to Be Addressed
About This Chapter
This chapter's epigraph is from a poem called "The Unmentionable." It's a poem about a man's inability to find his own way in the world. The poem's title is "Unmentionable," which means "unmentionable" in Latin. It also refers to the idea that a person can't be alone in a room without being noticed. In other words, the poem is about a person's ability to be alone and not be noticed by others. This is the first time the poem has been written in Latin, and it's also about the idea of a person not being alone. The narrator notes that the poem doesn't refer to a person, but rather to an empty stomach. He also notes that this is the day that the dwarf village in which the poem was written was massacred. He's not sure if this is an illusion or if something is wrong with the poem, but he's going to wait and observe to see what happens. He remembers the day the village was slaughtered, and he wants to find out what's wrong with his illusion. He wants to know why the other examinees are constantly drooling, why they stop running when they stop, and why they don't stop running as they stop. He wonders if his illusion is related to the day of the massacre of the village. He decides to observe what happens in the eyes of the examinees. He realizes that the day is the same as the day he saw the village massacred, so he'll look at the expressions of the other
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Legend of Phoenix

Legend of Phoenix • Chapter 80: One Should Not Take an Exam on an Empty Stomach, This Is a Serious Matter That Has to Be Addressed • Page ik-page-4351162
Chapter 80: One Should Not Take an Exam on an Empty Stomach, This Is a Serious Matter That Has to Be Addressed
This is a locked chapterChapter 80: One Should Not Take an Exam on an Empty Stomach, This Is a Serious Matter That Has to Be Addressed
About This Chapter
This chapter's epigraph is from a poem called "The Unmentionable." It's a poem about a man's inability to find his own way in the world. The poem's title is "Unmentionable," which means "unmentionable" in Latin. It also refers to the idea that a person can't be alone in a room without being noticed. In other words, the poem is about a person's ability to be alone and not be noticed by others. This is the first time the poem has been written in Latin, and it's also about the idea of a person not being alone. The narrator notes that the poem doesn't refer to a person, but rather to an empty stomach. He also notes that this is the day that the dwarf village in which the poem was written was massacred. He's not sure if this is an illusion or if something is wrong with the poem, but he's going to wait and observe to see what happens. He remembers the day the village was slaughtered, and he wants to find out what's wrong with his illusion. He wants to know why the other examinees are constantly drooling, why they stop running when they stop, and why they don't stop running as they stop. He wonders if his illusion is related to the day of the massacre of the village. He decides to observe what happens in the eyes of the examinees. He realizes that the day is the same as the day he saw the village massacred, so he'll look at the expressions of the other
Jump To Chapters
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