This chapter's epigraph comes from a famous poem by the English poet William Butler Yeats. It's about a spirit rabbit, and it says something like, "What smells so good?" or "What tastes so sublime?" . This is a reference to the smell of meat, which is what we're about to find out in this chapter. We're also about to learn that this is the kind of meat you'd find in a super-fancy restaurant. The narrator is super excited to be eating meat. He's also super excited about the fact that he's going to be able to ask Yuning if he is a celestial user. He wants to know if the spirit rabbits have marks on their body because they've used "inferno-art" techniques. He also wants to ask if he thinks that this guy is responsible for some of the murders that have taken place in the last few chapters. He doesn't think so, but he does want to know what kind of martial arts this guy uses. He asks if it's true that he created his own fighting arts, and if he'd even be believed if
This chapter's epigraph comes from a famous poem by the English poet William Butler Yeats. It's about a spirit rabbit, and it says something like, "What smells so good?" or "What tastes so sublime?" . This is a reference to the smell of meat, which is what we're about to find out in this chapter. We're also about to learn that this is the kind of meat you'd find in a super-fancy restaurant. The narrator is super excited to be eating meat. He's also super excited about the fact that he's going to be able to ask Yuning if he is a celestial user. He wants to know if the spirit rabbits have marks on their body because they've used "inferno-art" techniques. He also wants to ask if he thinks that this guy is responsible for some of the murders that have taken place in the last few chapters. He doesn't think so, but he does want to know what kind of martial arts this guy uses. He asks if it's true that he created his own fighting arts, and if he'd even be believed if