This chapter's epigraph comes from a line from the play's first chapter, "The Unmentionable." It's a quote from a book called "The Invisible Woman." It says, "I can sense a powerful aura, ah... I can sense there is a very powerful woman in the sky." This is a reference to the "Irrational Woman," who is the "implicit arbiter" of all things. This is the same woman who is responsible for all things evil in the world. The "Imperrational Woman" is the one who decides whether or not a person should be allowed to live or die. In other words, she decides whether a person is allowed to be alive or not. This passage is the epigraph for the second chapter of the play. It says that the "irrational woman" is "the arbiter," the "lord of the undead-demonic clan." The "imperrational woman," as she's also called, is the arbiter of the "unmentionable woman" and the "Lord of the Un
This chapter's epigraph comes from a line from the play's first chapter, "The Unmentionable." It's a quote from a book called "The Invisible Woman." It says, "I can sense a powerful aura, ah... I can sense there is a very powerful woman in the sky." This is a reference to the "Irrational Woman," who is the "implicit arbiter" of all things. This is the same woman who is responsible for all things evil in the world. The "Imperrational Woman" is the one who decides whether or not a person should be allowed to live or die. In other words, she decides whether a person is allowed to be alive or not. This passage is the epigraph for the second chapter of the play. It says that the "irrational woman" is "the arbiter," the "lord of the undead-demonic clan." The "imperrational woman," as she's also called, is the arbiter of the "unmentionable woman" and the "Lord of the Un