Cultivator Against Hero Society • Chapter 165 • Page ik-page-4483333
Cultivator Against Hero Society • Chapter 165 • Page ik-page-4483334
Chapter 165
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About This Chapter
This chapter's epigraph comes from a poem by a famous poet, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. Longfellow's poem, "Alone in the Storm," is about a storm, and it describes a storm in which people are trapped in a whirlpool of water. The storm is so strong that people can't get out of it. The poem ends with the poem's title, "Boom What the Hell Are These Two Bottles," which is a reference to the two bottles in the storm that are supposed to contain a magical substance called "Black and White Mages." This magical substance, according to the poem, is "black and white" . It's not clear what the magical substance is, but the poem says that it's "black" and "white" , which means that the water is black and white, and that the
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Cultivator Against Hero Society • Chapter 165 • Page ik-page-4483333
Cultivator Against Hero Society • Chapter 165 • Page ik-page-4483334
Chapter 165
This is a locked chapterChapter 165
About This Chapter
This chapter's epigraph comes from a poem by a famous poet, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. Longfellow's poem, "Alone in the Storm," is about a storm, and it describes a storm in which people are trapped in a whirlpool of water. The storm is so strong that people can't get out of it. The poem ends with the poem's title, "Boom What the Hell Are These Two Bottles," which is a reference to the two bottles in the storm that are supposed to contain a magical substance called "Black and White Mages." This magical substance, according to the poem, is "black and white" . It's not clear what the magical substance is, but the poem says that it's "black" and "white" , which means that the water is black and white, and that the
Jump To Chapters
Close Viewer