The Rise Of Frivolous Emperor • Chapter 57 • Page ik-page-2185415
The Rise Of Frivolous Emperor • Chapter 57 • Page ik-page-2185416
The Rise Of Frivolous Emperor • Chapter 57 • Page ik-page-2185417
The Rise Of Frivolous Emperor • Chapter 57 • Page ik-page-2185418
The Rise Of Frivolous Emperor • Chapter 57 • Page ik-page-2185419
Chapter 57
This is a locked chapterChapter 57
About This Chapter
This chapter's epigraph comes from a famous poem by the famous poet, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. Longfellow's poem, "Invisible Man," is a poem about a man who is invisible to the naked eye. He is invisible because he is blind, but he is also invisible because his eyes are so sensitive. In this poem, the blind man is a bastard emperor who is cruel to the people, and the empress is a good person who had to marry him. The empress sends a servant to fetch the servant, but the servant is not allowed to leave the palace. The servant tells the servant that the Empress is very kind to the nobles, and that she even sent some maids to accompany her, as a sign of her filial piety
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The Rise Of Frivolous Emperor • Chapter 57 • Page ik-page-2185415
The Rise Of Frivolous Emperor • Chapter 57 • Page ik-page-2185416
The Rise Of Frivolous Emperor • Chapter 57 • Page ik-page-2185417
The Rise Of Frivolous Emperor • Chapter 57 • Page ik-page-2185418
The Rise Of Frivolous Emperor • Chapter 57 • Page ik-page-2185419
Chapter 57
This is a locked chapterChapter 57
About This Chapter
This chapter's epigraph comes from a famous poem by the famous poet, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. Longfellow's poem, "Invisible Man," is a poem about a man who is invisible to the naked eye. He is invisible because he is blind, but he is also invisible because his eyes are so sensitive. In this poem, the blind man is a bastard emperor who is cruel to the people, and the empress is a good person who had to marry him. The empress sends a servant to fetch the servant, but the servant is not allowed to leave the palace. The servant tells the servant that the Empress is very kind to the nobles, and that she even sent some maids to accompany her, as a sign of her filial piety
Close Viewer