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The Seven Deadly Sins

The Seven Deadly Sins • Chapter 47 - Apostle of Destruction • Page ik-page-640633
The Seven Deadly Sins • Chapter 47 - Apostle of Destruction • Page ik-page-640630
The Seven Deadly Sins • Chapter 47 - Apostle of Destruction • Page ik-page-640637
Chapter 47 - Apostle of Destruction
This is a locked chapterChapter 47 - Apostle of Destruction
About This Chapter
In this chapter, we are introduced to the "apostle of destruction" , a character who has been created by God to destroy the world. In this case, it is the Roman Emperor, Diomedes, who is the personification of the "Seven Deadly Sins" . He is also known as the "Apostle of Destruction" because of his role in the destruction of the Roman Empire and because he was the first to discover the existence of the seven "deadly sins" and the source of the blood of the demon, Chiron, who was killed in the battle of Thermopylae . The epigraph to this chapter is from a poem by Octavius Caesar, in which he laments the loss of his beloved Octavius . In the poem, Caesar laments that he has lost his love for his wife, Isabella, and laments her death. He also laments his loss of the opportunity to save his wife from the "murder of the gods." He laments how he has been unable to protect her from the evil that has befallen her, and how he is
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The Seven Deadly Sins

The Seven Deadly Sins • Chapter 47 - Apostle of Destruction • Page ik-page-640633
The Seven Deadly Sins • Chapter 47 - Apostle of Destruction • Page ik-page-640630
The Seven Deadly Sins • Chapter 47 - Apostle of Destruction • Page ik-page-640637
Chapter 47 - Apostle of Destruction
This is a locked chapterChapter 47 - Apostle of Destruction
About This Chapter
In this chapter, we are introduced to the "apostle of destruction" , a character who has been created by God to destroy the world. In this case, it is the Roman Emperor, Diomedes, who is the personification of the "Seven Deadly Sins" . He is also known as the "Apostle of Destruction" because of his role in the destruction of the Roman Empire and because he was the first to discover the existence of the seven "deadly sins" and the source of the blood of the demon, Chiron, who was killed in the battle of Thermopylae . The epigraph to this chapter is from a poem by Octavius Caesar, in which he laments the loss of his beloved Octavius . In the poem, Caesar laments that he has lost his love for his wife, Isabella, and laments her death. He also laments his loss of the opportunity to save his wife from the "murder of the gods." He laments how he has been unable to protect her from the evil that has befallen her, and how he is
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