
Picking up a Father at the Beginning? No, I Am a Thousand-year-old Immortal Master
by Habu Bus
About This Novel
He lived for an unknown number of years, guarding a study, waiting for six children to come, and then sending them away with his own hands. Chen Shu is the master of Qingya Study. He lives forever and is accompanied by books. Until a wooden basin floats down the stream, the baby in the basin opens his eyes and looks at him, the system is activated, and the thousand-year loneliness finally has an echo. He accepted his first apprentice and named him A Huai. Then there are Ah Tang, Ah Zhu, Ah Yu, Ah Wei, and Ah Song-six children with miserable life experiences, six children who are destined to walk in front of him. He taught them how to read, practice swordsmanship, and be a good person. He watched them grow up, go down the mountain, and go to their respective destinies. He prevented disasters for them, found antidotes, and lit everlasting lamps for them. But he is an immortal, and they are not. On the day he sent away his last apprentice, Chen Shu planted six trees in front of his study. The spring breeze blew by, rustling the branches and leaves, as if someone was shouting-- "Master." Immortality is the gentlest curse, and companionship is the longest farewell. Six periods of life, six partings, all written in one poem.
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