Four weird stories. The first samurai abandoned his wife, and the second high-ranking wife had a bad temper and missed the first wife, and all she missed was her obedience and constant labor. Maybe this is different from love? Even turning into a ghost is weaving, and before taking revenge, she has to play a good wife again. In the end, being entangled by black hair is also well deserved, but the sallow complexion and the hair falling off are more scary than ghosts. The first story has a little more narration, and the story is a little broken. I imagine there are several paragraphs. In the second story, the beautiful boy is not even willing to kill the female monster "Snow Girl". He will marry him for ten years, have children, and be happy. Unfortunately, the man still forgets his original promise after all, causing the Snow Girl to leave him. The beautiful dream just melted away, but the snow girl still has feelings, and she is reluctant to kill him and take care of the children. The sky set in this story is a fake, strange color, and often has eyes on it, maybe the sky is watching? The first two stories are relatively easy to guess, and even the female ghost is an image of a good wife. The third story recreates the naval battle, combined with paintings, and the pipa playing and singing with Japanese characteristics, which leads to the bizarre story of Fangichi playing for the emperor and the army's grievances, and it is even more bizarre that the ears are torn after writing the Heart Sutra. Playing the pipa to listen to the dignitaries is not afraid of ghosts, and it shows Fang Yi's pursuit of playing the pipa. The last story is also the most bizarre, but because it is too bizarre to write an ending, a layer of narrative is subtly nested, and the narrator and the writer himself become the person in the bowl with a sallow complexion and disheveled hair, who looks like the first one. The protagonist who is scared to death in the story is just as scary, and extending his hand to the audience adds to the level of horror.
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