Long Live The Emperor!: Analysis and explanation of Xia Ji’s enchantment
We will feel that if we draw the knife at me, we can kill it without shame.
When the two countries confronted each other, there was a woman who had the kindness of Song Xianggong's wife, who could not bear to kill the soldiers crossing the river, and was ridiculed for thousands of years.
These authors know it.
...
However, Xia Ji is not a general in history. He is a seeker and a protester. What he seeks is his own way, and what he fights is destiny.
Those people are weapons, but the evil ones are those who wield them, and the weapons themselves are living beings, millions of lives that "don't enter, don't obey, and will be condemned as heretics".
In other words, they were also forced to some extent, not by a voluntary will, and there were millions of them.
Of course, Xia Ji would not think so if he was in an equal position.
However, the current Xia Ji, his strength, has already reached a very detached position.
Because...
He didn't kill the enemy. The so-called enemy must at least "injure me".
But those people can't hurt Xia Ji.
What Xia Ji has always insisted on is to persuade people to do good, not to see evil and turn evil.
So, he wielded his sword and slaughtered, not those who rushed to die, but his own kindness.
Why cut.
Because, forced by the situation, I had to be killed.
...
The benevolent sees benevolence, and the wise sees wisdom. It's just an analysis. Just have fun. Don't spray it. Thank you.
This chapter is free.