You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.
The stepmother plotted to marry her off to a man in a business alliance. She grabbed a man in a flurry on the street and asked, "Do you dare to marry me?" Jing Baiyuan, who happened to be being ditched by his girlfriend, said, "It just so happens that I brought an account book with me today to register. Just like that, the 23 year old Yin Xiaoxiao was quickly married to the man she had only met twice.
One day, Shen Zhiqiao accidentally picked up a pretty boy, secretly raising him in the woodshed, eating and drinking well every day. Suddenly, one day, the beautiful man disappeared. She was abandoned and left homeless by her new husband. The ruthless little tyrant suddenly came to her, "I will repay you with my life!" Shen Zhiqiao: No, no, no, you don't want to ... Little Tyrant: This Emperor can help you torture scum men and women and destroy his entire family! Shen Zhiqiao: Let me think about it .... Little Tyrant: Queen, I'll hire you all over the country. I'll only love you for the rest of my life. Shen Zhiqiao:! Think about it, little tyrant, come. Sister loves you!
An Immortal Emperor reborn in a city, acting tough and slapping his face, courting a girl, and then leaving in a good mood!
None
This biography of the Ninth Panchen Lama, the second highest spiritual authority in Tibetan Buddhism, offers new insights into the tumultuous history of the relations between China and Tibet at the start of the twentieth century. It demonstrates how the Panchen Lama's flight from his monastery on the night of December 22, 1923, remains an essential characterizing event of Tibet's modern history. In China, the Panchen Lama became entwined with not only the Republican government, but also the world of international politics. By the 1930s, the prelate was to find himself a pawn in a diplomatic game played by China, Lhasa, and England for control of Tibet. His flight from his country set the stage for Chinese Republican, and later Communist, control over the selection of his successors, with repercussions even today for Sino-Tibetan relations. Book jacket.
None