Chapter 1390: Nodin was furious and refused to leave

Listening to such a long remark, Nodin did not hesitate, and estimated that he didn't know how many times he had tossed and turned in his head, so as soon as he had this opportunity, he opened his mouth and replied: " Resourceful self-reliant, your sixth brother, so I have something to say to you, this matter is more responsible, I must speak to you directly, tell you what I think, and the conclusion of the matter, so that you will not come in turn, sit beside me, and babble endlessly, I hate the threshold of death, and I hate the fellow, who thinks one thing and says another, and yet I will tell you the truth—in my opinion, it is the most appropriate one! Nobu can't convince me, tell you, no, and neither can others, look at my situation, fight against strong enemies, fight without ceasing, and get nothing in return, fate treats those who retreat and fight bravely, the same honor awaits the brave and the cowardly. Death is not wrong, even if you are idle, even if you are tired and break your bones, what have I gained? nothing, but to wear my life and torment my body and mind in a never-ending fierce battle. Like a mother bird, holding on to small pieces of food, no matter what she finds, feeding the young ones who are waiting to grow wings, but I am always bitter, just like this, I have survived sleepless nights, endured days of bloody bitter struggles, and fought to the death in order to snatch the brave wives of the enemy. I plundered twelve castles by sea, and by land, in the fertile land of the enemy, I remember eleven more, and I took a great deal of booty, and piles of good things, and dragged them back from these castles, and handed them over to No, who always stood by the clipper behind them, and took the spoils, and gave them to others little by little, but he himself had the lion. He gave some of the spoils to the chiefs and kings, and they have kept their share hitherto, but from me, that is, of all, he has taken away and taken my beloved woman, and yet why have we waged war against the people of the East City? Why have we recruited troops and horses to bring us here to fight? Not to regain the long-haired and beautiful Helen? Is it true that among the mortals, only the Nowu brothers know how to love their wife? No! any decency. Sensible men love and love their own women, like me, and really love my Helen, although she is a female captive with my spear and spear, and now Noe wants to take Helen from me, or give it back to Noc, or keep it himself, but he can no longer deceive me, is he still embarrassed to persuade me to change my mind? I know this man, and he does not want to persuade me! You are my sixth brother, and I am your fourth brother, and I will not be deceived by the fifth day, so let him consult with you and the other kings how to keep the ferocious fire out of his ships, and behold, without me, he has completed a great work, and has built a parapet wall, and dug a trench around it, a wide and deep trench, and laid a sharp stake, but even so, he could not stop the courage of the murderer, and when I fought with my warriors, he never dared to run far from the wall, but at most ran to the front and the oak tree, and that day, when he saw that I was alone, he intended to fight me, and he almost did not escape my killingBut now I have no intention of fighting with the pre-eminent Nobing, and to-morrow morning I will offer sacrifices to all the mighty and angels, and fill my ships and sail out to the great seas, and if you will, if you are interested in this, come out and see, in the dawn, my fleet sails on the surface of the Red Sea, where schools of fish swim, and my sailors sit firmly on the deck, and row forward with great interest! If the glorious angel of the Split Earth bestows a safe waterway, and meets the light of day on the third day, we will set foot on the fertile land of the Virgin East, where my abundant wealth has been left behind, in order to begin this unfortunate voyage, from here I will bring back more things, gold, crimson bronze, The beautiful woman with a girdle and the gray and black cast iron, all these things are my share of the hard work, but I have lost my booty, and the man who gave it to me has taken it with great force, and has taken it again and again, and go back, and tell him all that I have said in public, so that if he tries to deceive another man like me the next time, this fellow will always be so brazen, and the people will rise against him out of public indignation, and yet, though he is as bold as a dog, he will not dare to look me in the eye again! I will never speak with him again, nor will I act with him, he has deceived me and hurt me. I will never be fooled by his rhetoric again, is not enough once?Let him go to hell, the resourceful Satan has taken away his mind, I hate his gifts, they are like crumbs in my eyes, I will not change my mind, even if he gives me ten times, Twenty times as much, as he now had, even if he could dig up more treasures from other places, whether in the treasury or in the treasures that had been gathered together, this city of the Egyptians, with the richest riches on earth, a city with a hundred gates! Through each gate, two hundred warriors galloped out, and drove their chariots and horses into battle! I will not change my mind, even if his gifts are as numerous as grains of sand and mud! Even so, Noe would not want me to change my mind, and I wanted him to pay for the heart-wrenching humiliation he had brought upon me by his barbarism! I would not marry Noe's daughter, even if she was more beautiful than the most beautiful goddess in the world! Even so, I would not want her! Let him find another son-in-law, and find someone he liked, who was more kingly than me! If the Almighty let me live, if I could survive my homeland, I would marry Helen, which I had chosen myself, to make her my beloved wife. I thought that my life was more precious than my riches, and even if, as they had said, in the days of the past, in the time of peace that we had not yet come, the fortified castle of the East City, all the gold and silver that had ever possessed, even the treasures that the marksmen had sealed with hard stones, the cattle and the fat sheep that could be obtained by plunder, the three-legged bronze tripod and the chestnut-faced war horses that could be obtained through trade, but the soul of man, once it slipped out of the gap, could no longer be recovered by robbery, nor could it be recovered by Yijia. My mother has said to me that I am destined for the end of my life with two destinies: if I stay here and fight at the edge of the Trojans, I will return home hopelessly, but I will win eternal glory, and if I return home, to my beloved land, my glory and honor will cease to exist, but I can live in my old age, and the end of my death will not come in a hurry, and I will urge you to return home, for there is no hope of breaking the city, and Satan is covering the steep castle and the towering gates with his great hand, and his soldiers are becoming more and more courageous; therefore, when you return to the princes, and take with me a message, it is the right of the commanders of the army: let them think about itto find a better way to save my own ship, to save my army, which has now been forced into the depths of the sea, and because I am furious, the plan at hand, that is, the way they have devised the battle, will not change the tide of the war, and I will return home to-morrow. When Nodin had finished this tirade, the crowd was silent and silent, amazed at his words, his strong words, and the depth of the contradiction between him and Nodin that if one side kept putting it down, it would be a mess that no one could solve.

At last, the silence was broken by the old chariot warrior Nicks, who wept as he feared for everyone's boats: "Do you really want to go home, glorious Nodin? The old chariot warrior asked me to go with you, and on that day he told you to leave your hometown and join the expedition of Noe, and you, a child who had not been accidental, had neither the danger of war, nor the experience of argumentation, and who distinguished men in eloquence, so he asked me to go with you, and to teach you these skills, to be a eloquent debater, a daring warrior, and for this reason I would not leave you, my child, and not want to remain here, even if the gods themselves made a wish to me to scrape off the wrinkles of age and restore me to my youth, as he had done when I first left, in order to escape from my father's entanglement, when he was in a rage, for a mistress with beautiful hairMy mother, in a fit of rage, threw her arms around my knees and begged me to take away my father's lover and make her hate the old man's love, and I accepted my mother's plea and did what she wanted me to do, but my father became suspicious and cursed me and begged the cruel goddess of vengeance that I would never have a child, and not be born of my blood, and give birth to any child, as my father's grandson, frolicking on his knees. In my rage, I had the idea of killing him, to take his life with a swift bronze, but a god stopped my rage and told me to beware of the rumors, and to remember that men are terrible, and not to let people point at their backs and curse: This man killed his own father! At that time, I was in a state of turmoil, and I was about to run away from home in the face of my angry father, who could no longer wander in his house, but a group of relatives, friends, and cousins of the same clan surrounded me, left me in the courtyard, and begged me not to run away. They slaughtered a great multitude of fat sheep, and staggering legged oxen, and herds of fat pigs, with shining oil, and picked up the tips of their forks, and set up firewood, and burned the hairs of the animals; the big ones drank heartily, and drank the old man's collection of fine wine; for several nights they waited by my side, and the firewood was blazing, never extinguished, and one was lit in the well-walled courtyard, under the colonnade by the door, and the other in the porch outside the door of my bedroom. On the tenth night, when I could not see my fingers, I stabbed through the sturdy door of the house, and slipped over the walls of the courtyard, and with a light movement, I escaped from the guards and the maids, and then I flew away, wandering through the vast wilderness, and at last came to the fertile Near East, where the mother of the flock, found the king, and your father, who warmly took me in, and your father loved me as a father loved his own son, the only seed of the rich family, who made me rich, and gave me a multitude of people, and sat at the very edge of the Near East, and I nurtured and made thee mighty like a god, O Nodin, and I loved thee from my heart。 When you were a child, you didn't want to go out to dinner with others, or eat in your own hall, unless I asked you to sit on my lap, cut off small pieces of minced meat for you to eat, and then hold the glass to your lips. Thou hast often vomited wine and wet my shirt, and the child has done whatever he pleases, and hast made me miserable, and in this way I have toiled for thee, and have eaten enough of the past, and muttered in my heart that the gods would not let me have a son of my own, and therefore, the god-like Nobo, I have made thee my own child, and I hope that one day you will relieve me of my sorrows. Today, Nodin, suppress your fury of rage! You can't be so hard-hearted, even the gods give in, though they are stronger and stronger and more honored than we are, and if anyone does something wrong and breaks the rules, he can make the gods appease and even tolerate them by making sacrifices and pious vows, with cups full of drink and strong cigarettes, and you know that supplication is a powerful angel, who is lame, with wrinkled faces, and with squinting eyes, and who walk far behind destruction; Be quick, overtake every inquiry, and rush to the lands to make the people stumble and suffer, and pray to follow and heal their sorrows, and when they come near, if someone respects them, they will bring him great good, and listen to his plea, but if anyone forsake them, and refuse them with rough words, they will come to the Almighty, and ask him to command destruction, and to pursue this man, and to afflict him, and to suffer his sins, and to be punished, and to be angry, Nodin, and to be honored and supplied, and thou shalt be no exception— Respect will change the minds of others, including heroes, and if Noor had not given you these gifts and made more promises, and if he had been furious, I would not have advised you to give up your anger and go to the aid of the soldiers, who were desperate to need you! But now he wants to give you so much and promise you more, and he sends the best men to beg you, the leaders chosen from the army, your most beloved friends in the whole army, and do not let them go in vain, though no one can blame your anger until then, and we have heard that the fury of the fury has won over the great heroes, and yet people can still be converted by gifts and persuasions. I still remember an old thing, a past event that wasn't new, and I remember how it happened. You are all my friends, and I would like to bring you up again. Then the old man, who had always regarded Nodin as his son, nagged him some stories of making mistakes and then repenting, hoping to make Nodin change his mind, and agree to go out to kill the enemy.

However, the old man's wish was disappointed. vertex