This chapter's epigraph comes from a famous poem by the English poet William Butler Yeats. It's a quote from a poem in which a character says something like, "I'm not a poet, I'm a messenger." In other words, the poem is about a messenger's ability to communicate with the people around him. In this case, the speaker is the messenger, and it's the messenger who speaks to the speaker. The speaker is a messenger, but he's also a messenger for the king. The king is the king's servant, and the messenger is the servant of the king, so the king appoints the servant to be his messenger. The servant is the master of the kingdom, and so the master appoints him to be the messenger. So the king hires the messenger to serve him, and then he appoints a master to serve the master. The master hires the servant, then he hires the master, and now the master has the servant serve him. This means that the master can do whatever he wants with the servant. This is why the king chooses the servant as his messenger, because he knows that the servant will be loyal to the king and will be able to do whatever the master wants him to do. So, the master decides to hire the servant because the servant is loyal to him and will help him do what he wants to do with the master's money. This makes the servant a master, because the master knows that he will have to pay the servant's wages, and he can't do that if the servant doesn't pay them. This also makes the master a master because he can do anything he wants without having to pay any
This chapter's epigraph comes from a famous poem by the English poet William Butler Yeats. It's a quote from a poem in which a character says something like, "I'm not a poet, I'm a messenger." In other words, the poem is about a messenger's ability to communicate with the people around him. In this case, the speaker is the messenger, and it's the messenger who speaks to the speaker. The speaker is a messenger, but he's also a messenger for the king. The king is the king's servant, and the messenger is the servant of the king, so the king appoints the servant to be his messenger. The servant is the master of the kingdom, and so the master appoints him to be the messenger. So the king hires the messenger to serve him, and then he appoints a master to serve the master. The master hires the servant, then he hires the master, and now the master has the servant serve him. This means that the master can do whatever he wants with the servant. This is why the king chooses the servant as his messenger, because he knows that the servant will be loyal to the king and will be able to do whatever the master wants him to do. So, the master decides to hire the servant because the servant is loyal to him and will help him do what he wants to do with the master's money. This makes the servant a master, because the master knows that he will have to pay the servant's wages, and he can't do that if the servant doesn't pay them. This also makes the master a master because he can do anything he wants without having to pay any