Phoenix in the Imperial Palace • Chapter 49 • Page ik-page-2662763
Phoenix in the Imperial Palace • Chapter 49 • Page ik-page-2662736
Phoenix in the Imperial Palace • Chapter 49 • Page ik-page-2662738
Chapter 49
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About This Chapter
This chapter's epigraph comes from a famous poem by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, who was one of the most famous poets of the twentieth century. Longfellow's poem is about a man who escapes from a prison and finds himself in the middle of a battle. He escapes from the prison by running through a maze of tunnels. He finds his way to the top of the tunnel, where he finds himself on the other side of a wall, surrounded by a wall of thick stone. The wall is made of marble, and the walls of the tunnels are made of wood. The two men escape through the tunnels.
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Phoenix in the Imperial Palace • Chapter 49 • Page ik-page-2662763
Phoenix in the Imperial Palace • Chapter 49 • Page ik-page-2662736
Phoenix in the Imperial Palace • Chapter 49 • Page ik-page-2662738
Chapter 49
This is a locked chapterChapter 49
About This Chapter
This chapter's epigraph comes from a famous poem by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, who was one of the most famous poets of the twentieth century. Longfellow's poem is about a man who escapes from a prison and finds himself in the middle of a battle. He escapes from the prison by running through a maze of tunnels. He finds his way to the top of the tunnel, where he finds himself on the other side of a wall, surrounded by a wall of thick stone. The wall is made of marble, and the walls of the tunnels are made of wood. The two men escape through the tunnels.
Close Viewer