Bury the Qing Dynasty
Chapter 480 I want to make it messy!
Chapter 480 I want to make it messy!
PS: Turn on anti-theft in this chapter, and it will return to normal after an hour.
The sentence "Yuben Huaiyou commoner clothes, how can the world belong to me" is not Zhu Yuanzhang's original words. "He Jiayan for me" comes from Mencius's "He Jiayan for Wanzhong", which belongs to the combination of Mingyue's front and back.
The old Emperor Zhu said half of what he said, which means he only pretended to be half of it, and the remaining half can only be pretended by Zhu Jinsong, the Emperor Zhu.
Emperor Zhu stared at Mukalla City in the distance, and said in a deep voice, "I am a commoner, what can the world do to me?"
Classmate Zhu Jianying was in the dark.
Are you a commoner?
There is nothing wrong with this statement, after all, Emperor Zhu was indeed just a poor farmer before he raised his troops, and he was also the kind of tenant farmer who did not have his own land, belonging to the commoner among the commoners.
The question is, how did your old man have the nerve to say "what can I do with the world"?
Combined with the "I am originally a commoner" in the previous sentence, the sentence "What can the world do to me" has several meanings.
The first meaning is that if it wasn't for him not to treat the common people as human beings, how could the world be in my hands?
The second meaning is that I, the Emperor of Ming Dynasty, was originally an ordinary citizen, so what if I become an emperor now?I'm still the same boy I was before~
Of course, there is a third meaning, which is also the true meaning of Emperor Zhu's words: I don't care about fame or not. If the history books are willing to write us as a Ming emperor, then let us be a Ming emperor. If we write it as the king of Jie and Zhou, then we are the king of Jie and Zhou. Anyway, no one can delay Lao Tzu's desire to do the whole little broken ball.
Anyway, no matter what you say, it can't change the fact that Emperor Zhu wants to pretend to be a coward, and it can't change the ignorance of student Zhu Jianying.
Just as classmate Zhu Jianying was secretly admiring Emperor Zhu's hooliganism, Emperor Zhu changed the subject and asked, "How many years do you think the whole little broken ball will be safe?"
The sentence "Yuben Huaiyou commoner clothes, how can the world belong to me" is not Zhu Yuanzhang's original words. "He Jiayan for me" comes from Mencius's "He Jiayan for Wanzhong", which belongs to the combination of Mingyue's front and back.
The old Emperor Zhu said half of what he said, which means he only pretended to be half of it, and the remaining half can only be pretended by Zhu Jinsong, the Emperor Zhu.
Emperor Zhu stared at Mukalla City in the distance, and said in a deep voice, "I am a commoner, what can the world do to me?"
Classmate Zhu Jianying was in the dark.
Are you a commoner?
There is nothing wrong with this statement, after all, Emperor Zhu was indeed just a poor farmer before he raised his troops, and he was also the kind of tenant farmer who did not have his own land, belonging to the commoner among the commoners.
The question is, how did your old man have the nerve to say "what can I do with the world"?
Combined with the "I am originally a commoner" in the previous sentence, the sentence "What can the world do to me" has several meanings.
The first meaning is that if it wasn't for him not to treat the common people as human beings, how could the world be in my hands?
The second meaning is that I, the Emperor of Ming Dynasty, was originally an ordinary citizen, so what if I become an emperor now?I am still the boy I was before, nothing has changed~
Of course, there is a third meaning, which is also the true meaning of Emperor Zhu's words: I don't care about fame or not. If the history books are willing to write us as a Ming emperor, then let us be a Ming emperor. If we write it as the king of Jie and Zhou, then we are the king of Jie and Zhou. Anyway, no one can delay Lao Tzu's desire to do the whole little broken ball.
Anyway, no matter what you say, it can't change the fact that Emperor Zhu wants to pretend to be a coward, and it can't change the ignorance of student Zhu Jianying.
Just as classmate Zhu Jianying was secretly admiring Emperor Zhu's hooliganism, Emperor Zhu changed the subject and asked, "How many years do you think the whole little broken ball will be safe?"
The sentence "Yuben Huaiyou commoner clothes, how can the world belong to me" is not Zhu Yuanzhang's original words. "He Jiayan for me" comes from Mencius's "He Jiayan for Wanzhong", which belongs to the combination of Mingyue's front and back.
The old Emperor Zhu said half of what he said, which means he only pretended to be half of it, and the remaining half can only be pretended by Zhu Jinsong, the Emperor Zhu.
Emperor Zhu stared at Mukalla City in the distance, and said in a deep voice, "I am a commoner, what can the world do to me?"
Classmate Zhu Jianying was in the dark.
Are you a commoner?
There is nothing wrong with this statement, after all, Emperor Zhu was indeed just a poor farmer before he raised his troops, and he was also the kind of tenant farmer who did not have his own land, belonging to the commoner among the commoners.
The question is, how did your old man have the nerve to say "what can I do with the world"?
Combined with the "I am originally a commoner" in the previous sentence, the sentence "What can the world do to me" has several meanings.
The first meaning is that if it wasn't for him not to treat the common people as human beings, how could the world be in my hands?
The second meaning is that I, the Emperor of Ming Dynasty, was originally an ordinary citizen, so what if I become an emperor now?I am still the boy I was before, nothing has changed~
Of course, there is a third meaning, which is also the true meaning of Emperor Zhu's words: I don't care about fame or not. If the history books are willing to write us as a Ming emperor, then let us be a Ming emperor. If we write it as the king of Jie and Zhou, then we are the king of Jie and Zhou. Anyway, no one can delay Lao Tzu's desire to do the whole little broken ball.
Anyway, no matter what you say, it can't change the fact that Emperor Zhu wants to pretend to be a coward, and it can't change the ignorance of student Zhu Jianying. How did you, old man, treat a good emperor as a hooligan?
Just as classmate Zhu Jianying was secretly admiring Emperor Zhu's hooliganism, Emperor Zhu changed the subject and asked, "How many years do you think the whole little broken ball will be safe?"
The sentence "Yuben Huaiyou commoner clothes, how can the world belong to me" is not Zhu Yuanzhang's original words. "He Jiayan for me" comes from Mencius's "He Jiayan for Wanzhong", which belongs to the combination of Mingyue's front and back.
The old Emperor Zhu said half of what he said, which means he only pretended to be half of it, and the remaining half can only be pretended by Zhu Jinsong, the Emperor Zhu.
Emperor Zhu stared at Mukalla City in the distance, and said in a deep voice, "I am a commoner, what can the world do to me?"
Classmate Zhu Jianying was in the dark.
Are you a commoner?
There is nothing wrong with this statement, after all, Emperor Zhu was indeed just a poor farmer before he raised his troops, and he was also the kind of tenant farmer who did not have his own land, belonging to the commoner among the commoners.
The question is, how did your old man have the nerve to say "what can I do with the world"?
Combined with the "I am originally a commoner" in the previous sentence, the sentence "What can the world do to me" has several meanings.
The first meaning is that if it wasn't for him not to treat the common people as human beings, how could the world be in my hands?
The second meaning is that I, the Emperor of Ming Dynasty, was originally an ordinary citizen, so what if I become an emperor now?I am still the boy I was before, nothing has changed~
Of course, there is a third meaning, which is also the true meaning of Emperor Zhu's words: I don't care about fame or not. If the history books are willing to write us as a Ming emperor, then let us be a Ming emperor. If we write it as the king of Jie and Zhou, then we are the king of Jie and Zhou. Anyway, no one can delay Lao Tzu's desire to do the whole little broken ball.
Anyway, no matter what you say, it can't change the fact that Emperor Zhu wants to pretend to be a coward, and it can't change the ignorance of student Zhu Jianying.
Just as classmate Zhu Jianying was secretly admiring Emperor Zhu's hooliganism, Emperor Zhu changed the subject and asked, "How many years do you think the whole little broken ball will be safe?"
The sentence "Yuben Huaiyou commoner clothes, how can the world belong to me" is not Zhu Yuanzhang's original words. "He Jiayan for me" comes from Mencius's "He Jiayan for Wanzhong", which belongs to the combination of Mingyue's front and back.
The old Emperor Zhu said half of what he said, which means he only pretended to be half of it, and the remaining half can only be pretended by Zhu Jinsong, the Emperor Zhu.
Emperor Zhu stared at Mukalla City in the distance, and said in a deep voice, "I am a commoner, what can the world do to me?"
Classmate Zhu Jianying was in the dark.
Are you a commoner?
There is nothing wrong with this statement, after all, Emperor Zhu was indeed just a poor farmer before he raised his troops, and he was also the kind of tenant farmer who did not have his own land, belonging to the commoner among the commoners.
The question is, how did your old man have the nerve to say "what can I do with the world"?
Combined with the "I am originally a commoner" in the previous sentence, the sentence "What can the world do to me" has several meanings.
The first meaning is that if it wasn't for him not to treat the common people as human beings, how could the world be in my hands?
The second meaning is that I, the Emperor of Ming Dynasty, was originally an ordinary citizen, so what if I become an emperor now?I am still the boy I was before, nothing has changed~
Of course, there is a third meaning, which is also the true meaning of Emperor Zhu's words: I don't care about fame or not. If the history books are willing to write us as a Ming emperor, then let us be a Ming emperor. If we write it as the king of Jie and Zhou, then we are the king of Jie and Zhou. Anyway, no one can delay Lao Tzu's desire to do the whole little broken ball.
Anyway, no matter what you say, it can't change the fact that Emperor Zhu wants to pretend to be a coward, and it can't change the ignorance of student Zhu Jianying. How did you, old man, treat a good emperor as a hooligan?
Just as classmate Zhu Jianying was secretly admiring Emperor Zhu's hooliganism, Emperor Zhu changed the subject and asked, "How many years do you think the whole little broken ball will be safe?"
The sentence "Yuben Huaiyou commoner clothes, how can the world belong to me" is not Zhu Yuanzhang's original words. "He Jiayan for me" comes from Mencius's "He Jiayan for Wanzhong", which belongs to the combination of Mingyue's front and back.
The old Emperor Zhu said half of what he said, which means he only pretended to be half of it, and the remaining half can only be pretended by Zhu Jinsong, the Emperor Zhu.
Emperor Zhu stared at Mukalla City in the distance, and said in a deep voice, "I am a commoner, what can the world do to me?"
Classmate Zhu Jianying was in the dark.
Are you a commoner?
There is nothing wrong with this statement, after all, Emperor Zhu was indeed just a poor farmer before he raised his troops, and he was also the kind of tenant farmer who did not have his own land, belonging to the commoner among the commoners.
The question is, how did your old man have the nerve to say "what can I do with the world"?
Combined with the "I am originally a commoner" in the previous sentence, the sentence "What can the world do to me" has several meanings.
The first meaning is that if it wasn't for him not to treat the common people as human beings, how could the world be in my hands?
The second meaning is that I, the Emperor of Ming Dynasty, was originally an ordinary citizen, so what if I become an emperor now?I am still the boy I was before, nothing has changed~
Of course, there is a third meaning, which is also the true meaning of Emperor Zhu's words: I don't care about fame or not. If the history books are willing to write us as a Ming emperor, then let us be a Ming emperor. If we write it as the king of Jie and Zhou, then we are the king of Jie and Zhou. Anyway, no one can delay Lao Tzu's desire to do the whole little broken ball.
Anyway, no matter what you say, it can't change the fact that Emperor Zhu wants to pretend to be a coward, and it can't change the ignorance of student Zhu Jianying.
Just as classmate Zhu Jianying was secretly admiring Emperor Zhu's hooliganism, Emperor Zhu changed the subject and asked, "How many years do you think the whole little broken ball will be safe?"
The old Emperor Zhu said half of what he said, which means he only pretended to be half of it, and the remaining half can only be pretended by Zhu Jinsong, the Emperor Zhu.
Emperor Zhu stared at Mukalla City in the distance, and said in a deep voice, "I am a commoner, what can the world do to me?"
The question is, how did your old man have the nerve to say "what can I do with the world"?
Combined with the "I am originally a commoner" in the previous sentence, the sentence "What can the world do to me" has several meanings.
(End of this chapter)
PS: Turn on anti-theft in this chapter, and it will return to normal after an hour.
The sentence "Yuben Huaiyou commoner clothes, how can the world belong to me" is not Zhu Yuanzhang's original words. "He Jiayan for me" comes from Mencius's "He Jiayan for Wanzhong", which belongs to the combination of Mingyue's front and back.
The old Emperor Zhu said half of what he said, which means he only pretended to be half of it, and the remaining half can only be pretended by Zhu Jinsong, the Emperor Zhu.
Emperor Zhu stared at Mukalla City in the distance, and said in a deep voice, "I am a commoner, what can the world do to me?"
Classmate Zhu Jianying was in the dark.
Are you a commoner?
There is nothing wrong with this statement, after all, Emperor Zhu was indeed just a poor farmer before he raised his troops, and he was also the kind of tenant farmer who did not have his own land, belonging to the commoner among the commoners.
The question is, how did your old man have the nerve to say "what can I do with the world"?
Combined with the "I am originally a commoner" in the previous sentence, the sentence "What can the world do to me" has several meanings.
The first meaning is that if it wasn't for him not to treat the common people as human beings, how could the world be in my hands?
The second meaning is that I, the Emperor of Ming Dynasty, was originally an ordinary citizen, so what if I become an emperor now?I'm still the same boy I was before~
Of course, there is a third meaning, which is also the true meaning of Emperor Zhu's words: I don't care about fame or not. If the history books are willing to write us as a Ming emperor, then let us be a Ming emperor. If we write it as the king of Jie and Zhou, then we are the king of Jie and Zhou. Anyway, no one can delay Lao Tzu's desire to do the whole little broken ball.
Anyway, no matter what you say, it can't change the fact that Emperor Zhu wants to pretend to be a coward, and it can't change the ignorance of student Zhu Jianying.
Just as classmate Zhu Jianying was secretly admiring Emperor Zhu's hooliganism, Emperor Zhu changed the subject and asked, "How many years do you think the whole little broken ball will be safe?"
The sentence "Yuben Huaiyou commoner clothes, how can the world belong to me" is not Zhu Yuanzhang's original words. "He Jiayan for me" comes from Mencius's "He Jiayan for Wanzhong", which belongs to the combination of Mingyue's front and back.
The old Emperor Zhu said half of what he said, which means he only pretended to be half of it, and the remaining half can only be pretended by Zhu Jinsong, the Emperor Zhu.
Emperor Zhu stared at Mukalla City in the distance, and said in a deep voice, "I am a commoner, what can the world do to me?"
Classmate Zhu Jianying was in the dark.
Are you a commoner?
There is nothing wrong with this statement, after all, Emperor Zhu was indeed just a poor farmer before he raised his troops, and he was also the kind of tenant farmer who did not have his own land, belonging to the commoner among the commoners.
The question is, how did your old man have the nerve to say "what can I do with the world"?
Combined with the "I am originally a commoner" in the previous sentence, the sentence "What can the world do to me" has several meanings.
The first meaning is that if it wasn't for him not to treat the common people as human beings, how could the world be in my hands?
The second meaning is that I, the Emperor of Ming Dynasty, was originally an ordinary citizen, so what if I become an emperor now?I am still the boy I was before, nothing has changed~
Of course, there is a third meaning, which is also the true meaning of Emperor Zhu's words: I don't care about fame or not. If the history books are willing to write us as a Ming emperor, then let us be a Ming emperor. If we write it as the king of Jie and Zhou, then we are the king of Jie and Zhou. Anyway, no one can delay Lao Tzu's desire to do the whole little broken ball.
Anyway, no matter what you say, it can't change the fact that Emperor Zhu wants to pretend to be a coward, and it can't change the ignorance of student Zhu Jianying.
Just as classmate Zhu Jianying was secretly admiring Emperor Zhu's hooliganism, Emperor Zhu changed the subject and asked, "How many years do you think the whole little broken ball will be safe?"
The sentence "Yuben Huaiyou commoner clothes, how can the world belong to me" is not Zhu Yuanzhang's original words. "He Jiayan for me" comes from Mencius's "He Jiayan for Wanzhong", which belongs to the combination of Mingyue's front and back.
The old Emperor Zhu said half of what he said, which means he only pretended to be half of it, and the remaining half can only be pretended by Zhu Jinsong, the Emperor Zhu.
Emperor Zhu stared at Mukalla City in the distance, and said in a deep voice, "I am a commoner, what can the world do to me?"
Classmate Zhu Jianying was in the dark.
Are you a commoner?
There is nothing wrong with this statement, after all, Emperor Zhu was indeed just a poor farmer before he raised his troops, and he was also the kind of tenant farmer who did not have his own land, belonging to the commoner among the commoners.
The question is, how did your old man have the nerve to say "what can I do with the world"?
Combined with the "I am originally a commoner" in the previous sentence, the sentence "What can the world do to me" has several meanings.
The first meaning is that if it wasn't for him not to treat the common people as human beings, how could the world be in my hands?
The second meaning is that I, the Emperor of Ming Dynasty, was originally an ordinary citizen, so what if I become an emperor now?I am still the boy I was before, nothing has changed~
Of course, there is a third meaning, which is also the true meaning of Emperor Zhu's words: I don't care about fame or not. If the history books are willing to write us as a Ming emperor, then let us be a Ming emperor. If we write it as the king of Jie and Zhou, then we are the king of Jie and Zhou. Anyway, no one can delay Lao Tzu's desire to do the whole little broken ball.
Anyway, no matter what you say, it can't change the fact that Emperor Zhu wants to pretend to be a coward, and it can't change the ignorance of student Zhu Jianying. How did you, old man, treat a good emperor as a hooligan?
Just as classmate Zhu Jianying was secretly admiring Emperor Zhu's hooliganism, Emperor Zhu changed the subject and asked, "How many years do you think the whole little broken ball will be safe?"
The sentence "Yuben Huaiyou commoner clothes, how can the world belong to me" is not Zhu Yuanzhang's original words. "He Jiayan for me" comes from Mencius's "He Jiayan for Wanzhong", which belongs to the combination of Mingyue's front and back.
The old Emperor Zhu said half of what he said, which means he only pretended to be half of it, and the remaining half can only be pretended by Zhu Jinsong, the Emperor Zhu.
Emperor Zhu stared at Mukalla City in the distance, and said in a deep voice, "I am a commoner, what can the world do to me?"
Classmate Zhu Jianying was in the dark.
Are you a commoner?
There is nothing wrong with this statement, after all, Emperor Zhu was indeed just a poor farmer before he raised his troops, and he was also the kind of tenant farmer who did not have his own land, belonging to the commoner among the commoners.
The question is, how did your old man have the nerve to say "what can I do with the world"?
Combined with the "I am originally a commoner" in the previous sentence, the sentence "What can the world do to me" has several meanings.
The first meaning is that if it wasn't for him not to treat the common people as human beings, how could the world be in my hands?
The second meaning is that I, the Emperor of Ming Dynasty, was originally an ordinary citizen, so what if I become an emperor now?I am still the boy I was before, nothing has changed~
Of course, there is a third meaning, which is also the true meaning of Emperor Zhu's words: I don't care about fame or not. If the history books are willing to write us as a Ming emperor, then let us be a Ming emperor. If we write it as the king of Jie and Zhou, then we are the king of Jie and Zhou. Anyway, no one can delay Lao Tzu's desire to do the whole little broken ball.
Anyway, no matter what you say, it can't change the fact that Emperor Zhu wants to pretend to be a coward, and it can't change the ignorance of student Zhu Jianying.
Just as classmate Zhu Jianying was secretly admiring Emperor Zhu's hooliganism, Emperor Zhu changed the subject and asked, "How many years do you think the whole little broken ball will be safe?"
The sentence "Yuben Huaiyou commoner clothes, how can the world belong to me" is not Zhu Yuanzhang's original words. "He Jiayan for me" comes from Mencius's "He Jiayan for Wanzhong", which belongs to the combination of Mingyue's front and back.
The old Emperor Zhu said half of what he said, which means he only pretended to be half of it, and the remaining half can only be pretended by Zhu Jinsong, the Emperor Zhu.
Emperor Zhu stared at Mukalla City in the distance, and said in a deep voice, "I am a commoner, what can the world do to me?"
Classmate Zhu Jianying was in the dark.
Are you a commoner?
There is nothing wrong with this statement, after all, Emperor Zhu was indeed just a poor farmer before he raised his troops, and he was also the kind of tenant farmer who did not have his own land, belonging to the commoner among the commoners.
The question is, how did your old man have the nerve to say "what can I do with the world"?
Combined with the "I am originally a commoner" in the previous sentence, the sentence "What can the world do to me" has several meanings.
The first meaning is that if it wasn't for him not to treat the common people as human beings, how could the world be in my hands?
The second meaning is that I, the Emperor of Ming Dynasty, was originally an ordinary citizen, so what if I become an emperor now?I am still the boy I was before, nothing has changed~
Of course, there is a third meaning, which is also the true meaning of Emperor Zhu's words: I don't care about fame or not. If the history books are willing to write us as a Ming emperor, then let us be a Ming emperor. If we write it as the king of Jie and Zhou, then we are the king of Jie and Zhou. Anyway, no one can delay Lao Tzu's desire to do the whole little broken ball.
Anyway, no matter what you say, it can't change the fact that Emperor Zhu wants to pretend to be a coward, and it can't change the ignorance of student Zhu Jianying. How did you, old man, treat a good emperor as a hooligan?
Just as classmate Zhu Jianying was secretly admiring Emperor Zhu's hooliganism, Emperor Zhu changed the subject and asked, "How many years do you think the whole little broken ball will be safe?"
The sentence "Yuben Huaiyou commoner clothes, how can the world belong to me" is not Zhu Yuanzhang's original words. "He Jiayan for me" comes from Mencius's "He Jiayan for Wanzhong", which belongs to the combination of Mingyue's front and back.
The old Emperor Zhu said half of what he said, which means he only pretended to be half of it, and the remaining half can only be pretended by Zhu Jinsong, the Emperor Zhu.
Emperor Zhu stared at Mukalla City in the distance, and said in a deep voice, "I am a commoner, what can the world do to me?"
Classmate Zhu Jianying was in the dark.
Are you a commoner?
There is nothing wrong with this statement, after all, Emperor Zhu was indeed just a poor farmer before he raised his troops, and he was also the kind of tenant farmer who did not have his own land, belonging to the commoner among the commoners.
The question is, how did your old man have the nerve to say "what can I do with the world"?
Combined with the "I am originally a commoner" in the previous sentence, the sentence "What can the world do to me" has several meanings.
The first meaning is that if it wasn't for him not to treat the common people as human beings, how could the world be in my hands?
The second meaning is that I, the Emperor of Ming Dynasty, was originally an ordinary citizen, so what if I become an emperor now?I am still the boy I was before, nothing has changed~
Of course, there is a third meaning, which is also the true meaning of Emperor Zhu's words: I don't care about fame or not. If the history books are willing to write us as a Ming emperor, then let us be a Ming emperor. If we write it as the king of Jie and Zhou, then we are the king of Jie and Zhou. Anyway, no one can delay Lao Tzu's desire to do the whole little broken ball.
Anyway, no matter what you say, it can't change the fact that Emperor Zhu wants to pretend to be a coward, and it can't change the ignorance of student Zhu Jianying.
Just as classmate Zhu Jianying was secretly admiring Emperor Zhu's hooliganism, Emperor Zhu changed the subject and asked, "How many years do you think the whole little broken ball will be safe?"
The old Emperor Zhu said half of what he said, which means he only pretended to be half of it, and the remaining half can only be pretended by Zhu Jinsong, the Emperor Zhu.
Emperor Zhu stared at Mukalla City in the distance, and said in a deep voice, "I am a commoner, what can the world do to me?"
The question is, how did your old man have the nerve to say "what can I do with the world"?
Combined with the "I am originally a commoner" in the previous sentence, the sentence "What can the world do to me" has several meanings.
(End of this chapter)
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