Chapter 13 (Updated January 19, 2012)

Now the notebook and the picture are in front of me, and I just finished flipping it through.

There is no doubt that I don't understand these words, but I can tell that this is German, and apparently the body that the little brother found back then was the body of a German.

Even though I didn't understand the meaning of the words, I saw the picture and knew what the note was about. A few pages before the Tibetan phrase "The limits of the world" indicates a large bronze door.

The bronze door was made with very delicate brushstrokes, and the owner of the note must have been a master of painting. I could see that the bronze door, although it was not exactly the same as what I saw in Changbai Mountain, I knew that it must be the same kind of thing.

Is there more than one such giant gate? Is there another bronze gate in the heart of the Himalayas?

I was amazed, and went to look at the sentence "the limit of the world" and the accompanying picture on the side.

Could it be that what is drawn on this picture is the ultimate?

I pondered the picture, and it took me three days before I realized what it was. When I take it off, I will describe in the most detailed strokes what is drawn on this picture, and a wise person may be able to guess what it is until death.

First of all, the size of this notebook is about the size of a palm. Secondly, the above picture is drawn with a fountain pen and the lines are extremely delicate. Obviously, when the owner of the note paints, he does not record the mentality of the shape, but demands himself according to the standard of copying art. So, this picture is drawn with great care.

Finally, what we can see is a turtle shell, I don't have a scale, I don't know how big it is, but from the people on the side of the painting, it was an extremely large thing at that time, and there were very, very small cracks in the "turtle shell", and what surprised me was that the author of this painting had depicted all the cracks, and I could see that he was extremely careful to depict it, and not to paint it all the time for the sake of showing off or showing off his painting skills.

Right next to this turtle shell, there are eight smaller "turtle shells", which are arranged irregularly, forming a strange pattern with the large "turtle shells".

Around all the "turtle shells", there are a lot of tentacles, or cables, that are connected to each other like spider webs.

This is the limit of the world?

I was very surprised at the time, because these things seemed to be just some particularly ugly points, and if it weren't for the fact that the painter had drawn a few people in the composition to show that these things were incomparably large, they could have been seen as unremarkable objects.

What the hell is this? How can it be called the limit of the world? I've been searching the Internet for answers and discussing them with others. It wasn't until the third day that I realized that I had made a mistake, and although I was completely correct in my description, in fact, the picture did not look like that.

Once you know the correct view of this picture, you will immediately understand why this is the limit of the world. The little people next to me, who I thought were showing proportions, actually misled me.