This chapter's epigraph comes from the master's soliloquy, in which he laments the fact that his master has bled a little. He tells his master to stop playing with his blood, and to bring out his true strength. Otherwise, he says, the enemy will not be able to kill him. The master is so moved by the beauty of the scene that he mutilates the corpse of his master.
This chapter's epigraph comes from the master's soliloquy, in which he laments the fact that his master has bled a little. He tells his master to stop playing with his blood, and to bring out his true strength. Otherwise, he says, the enemy will not be able to kill him. The master is so moved by the beauty of the scene that he mutilates the corpse of his master.