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The Strange Wordsmith

The Strange Wordsmith • Chapter 32: The Link with Fire • Page ik-page-2460161
The Strange Wordsmith • Chapter 32: The Link with Fire • Page ik-page-2460162
Chapter 32: The Link with Fire
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This is a locked chapterChapter 32: The Link with Fire
About This Chapter
This chapter's epigraph is from the famous poem "Old Dog, Old Dog," which was written by the famous English poet, William Butler Yeats. The poem is about a dog who kills a dog, and the protagonist of the story is a dog that kills his dog. The protagonist of this poem is an engraver, a person who sees the souls of people. He sees that the blood of the dog has stopped flowing, and that the link between the blood and the fire has just about come to a halt. He asks the teacher what he's doing with this, and wonders what will happen if the destructive power of the word "Gui li" is triggered. The teacher says that he'll suppress it as soon as he triggers it. He also says that if Gui li's destructive power is not contained, the town will become a "sea of flames" . If the host of the town dies, then the lexicon will no longer exist, so it'll root itself wherever that host died. He says that the soul of Gui li still hasn't completely merged with the lexicon, but that he fears that all of the townspeople will become like the mystic era, when the eight lexicons clashed with one another to form an array of elements, but a place like mianzhu has only one lexicon, and it's power is pure. He tells the teacher that he can
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The Strange Wordsmith

The Strange Wordsmith • Chapter 32: The Link with Fire • Page ik-page-2460161
The Strange Wordsmith • Chapter 32: The Link with Fire • Page ik-page-2460162
Chapter 32: The Link with Fire
FREE
This is a locked chapterChapter 32: The Link with Fire
About This Chapter
This chapter's epigraph is from the famous poem "Old Dog, Old Dog," which was written by the famous English poet, William Butler Yeats. The poem is about a dog who kills a dog, and the protagonist of the story is a dog that kills his dog. The protagonist of this poem is an engraver, a person who sees the souls of people. He sees that the blood of the dog has stopped flowing, and that the link between the blood and the fire has just about come to a halt. He asks the teacher what he's doing with this, and wonders what will happen if the destructive power of the word "Gui li" is triggered. The teacher says that he'll suppress it as soon as he triggers it. He also says that if Gui li's destructive power is not contained, the town will become a "sea of flames" . If the host of the town dies, then the lexicon will no longer exist, so it'll root itself wherever that host died. He says that the soul of Gui li still hasn't completely merged with the lexicon, but that he fears that all of the townspeople will become like the mystic era, when the eight lexicons clashed with one another to form an array of elements, but a place like mianzhu has only one lexicon, and it's power is pure. He tells the teacher that he can
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