This chapter's epigraph comes from a famous poem by the famous poet and martial artist Zhanxian. The poem is about a duel between a man and a woman, and the poem describes the duel as a battle between the two women. In the poem, Zhanxi compares the duel to the duel between the king of the lingwu tribe and the founder of the Guixian sect, and he compares the battle to the battle between a king and his son. The epigraph also comes from the poem of the same title, which was written by a famous poet named Duan. Duan's poem describes a duel in which the king kills his son and the other son kills his father. The two sons kill the father and the son kills the king. The father kills the son, and Duan kills the master. The master is killed by the master's son, who is also killed by his son's father.
This chapter's epigraph comes from a famous poem by the famous poet and martial artist Zhanxian. The poem is about a duel between a man and a woman, and the poem describes the duel as a battle between the two women. In the poem, Zhanxi compares the duel to the duel between the king of the lingwu tribe and the founder of the Guixian sect, and he compares the battle to the battle between a king and his son. The epigraph also comes from the poem of the same title, which was written by a famous poet named Duan. Duan's poem describes a duel in which the king kills his son and the other son kills his father. The two sons kill the father and the son kills the king. The father kills the son, and Duan kills the master. The master is killed by the master's son, who is also killed by his son's father.