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Crack of Dawn

Crack of Dawn • Chapter 49 • Page ik-page-2652080
Crack of Dawn • Chapter 49 • Page ik-page-2652081
Crack of Dawn • Chapter 49 • Page ik-page-2652082
Chapter 49
This is a locked chapterChapter 49
About This Chapter
In this chapter, we learn that the Sphinx's final strike is to destroy everything that comes in his way. This means that if you want to kill the Sphinx, you're going to have to kill him first. This is because he has divine powers, which means that he can kill anything that's close to him. He tells us that he's already killed the Sphinx three times, and that he doesn't want to make himself an enemy by killing the Sphinx. He wants to leave everything to him, so he can destroy silver-robe. The Sphinx says that the people he has met are just like he predicted. He says that they're all good or evil, but that it's their thought, belief and self-perception that makes them so. These are the things that cause people to separate themselves from others, and this is why lies, greed, and emnity exist. These causes conflict between people. Finally, he says, because the world is what it is, we must wash the souls of all living things clean from their souls. He points out that when the Sphinx mentioned that the soul felt no pain, they did feel pain. They don't feel any fear or anger toward the soul, so even if the soul burns in fire, the soul feels no pain at all. In other words, they feel no fear and no anger towards the soul. He asks if this is the "true duty" that he has inherited from the creation god, and he says that perhaps this is his true duty after all. Then he asks if he
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INKR Logo

Crack of Dawn

Crack of Dawn • Chapter 49 • Page ik-page-2652080
Crack of Dawn • Chapter 49 • Page ik-page-2652081
Crack of Dawn • Chapter 49 • Page ik-page-2652082
Chapter 49
This is a locked chapterChapter 49
About This Chapter
In this chapter, we learn that the Sphinx's final strike is to destroy everything that comes in his way. This means that if you want to kill the Sphinx, you're going to have to kill him first. This is because he has divine powers, which means that he can kill anything that's close to him. He tells us that he's already killed the Sphinx three times, and that he doesn't want to make himself an enemy by killing the Sphinx. He wants to leave everything to him, so he can destroy silver-robe. The Sphinx says that the people he has met are just like he predicted. He says that they're all good or evil, but that it's their thought, belief and self-perception that makes them so. These are the things that cause people to separate themselves from others, and this is why lies, greed, and emnity exist. These causes conflict between people. Finally, he says, because the world is what it is, we must wash the souls of all living things clean from their souls. He points out that when the Sphinx mentioned that the soul felt no pain, they did feel pain. They don't feel any fear or anger toward the soul, so even if the soul burns in fire, the soul feels no pain at all. In other words, they feel no fear and no anger towards the soul. He asks if this is the "true duty" that he has inherited from the creation god, and he says that perhaps this is his true duty after all. Then he asks if he
Close Viewer