This chapter's epigraph comes from a famous poem by the English poet Henry James, "Ulysses." In the poem, a young man named Henry James compares himself to a fool who can control a sword. The young man says that his sword is so powerful that he may one day be able to control a king's sword. He compares his sword to a nine-essence fusion star formation, which is difficult to open. He says that the formation has weakened over time, and that he should use more soul energy to open it
This chapter's epigraph comes from a famous poem by the English poet Henry James, "Ulysses." In the poem, a young man named Henry James compares himself to a fool who can control a sword. The young man says that his sword is so powerful that he may one day be able to control a king's sword. He compares his sword to a nine-essence fusion star formation, which is difficult to open. He says that the formation has weakened over time, and that he should use more soul energy to open it