I really don't like to post this kind of single-chapter explanation, because it's always difficult to convince others.
But I feel I must say something. Some book friends I wrote were too detailed, and they kept brushing me off, and it lost the feeling of memorizing important events before.
Actually it's not.
I wrote seventeen chapters of Luosu, and actually accomplished one and a half things, including quelling the chaos and adding enfeoffment.
Luo Cheng wrote twenty chapters, but he only did one and a half things, which was to support the king and add enfeoffments.
I control every major event within twenty chapters, and the recent minting was completed in less than ten chapters. There are many things that could be expanded upon, but I didn’t write them.
Sometimes I am in a bad state, and the words I write are not beautiful. I know this. This is a normal thing, and every online article author has it.
But what I wrote is really not good.
According to the previous writing method, the fifteen chapters written by Emperor Wen of the Han Dynasty are gone, and the fifteen chapters written by Emperor Wu of the Han Dynasty are gone. I don’t know what to write about their great achievements and such little content.
The contrast between the changes in the world and reality, the changes in policies and systems, the interweaving of various plots, and the gradual emergence of the world background all take up space.
I don't really have hydrology.