This chapter's epigraph is from a famous poem by the English poet William Butler Yeats. It's a quote from a poem in which a man is overcome with grief over the death of a loved one. The poem is about a man who is overcome by grief, and it's about the power of grief. The speaker of the poem is a dragon, and he's in the middle of transforming into a dragon. He's surrounded by a bunch of dead people, and his power is overflowing. He wants to know where they've all been killed by the dragon warriors from theyong kingdom. He asks where Lady Long is, and she tells him that she's also there. He tells her that he rejected her confession because weak people aren't worthy to stay by his side. He
This chapter's epigraph is from a famous poem by the English poet William Butler Yeats. It's a quote from a poem in which a man is overcome with grief over the death of a loved one. The poem is about a man who is overcome by grief, and it's about the power of grief. The speaker of the poem is a dragon, and he's in the middle of transforming into a dragon. He's surrounded by a bunch of dead people, and his power is overflowing. He wants to know where they've all been killed by the dragon warriors from theyong kingdom. He asks where Lady Long is, and she tells him that she's also there. He tells her that he rejected her confession because weak people aren't worthy to stay by his side. He