Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Lucky day inquiry - Holding the sun, moon and stars, what's the next sentence?

Holding the sun, moon and stars, what's the next sentence?

Tang Jiasan Shao's The Throne of God

Originally from the first and second sentences of the Tang Dynasty poet Li Bai's ancient poem "Sleeping at the Mountain Temple", the whole poem is as follows:

The tall buildings of the temple on the mountain are really high, like a hundred feet. People upstairs are like a hand that can pick off the stars in the sky.

Standing here, I dare not speak loudly for fear of disturbing the gods in the sky.

After Tang Jiasan's adaptation, it is the inner monologue of Electrolux, necromancer, divine dharma god and the undead natural disaster in the throne of God:

"Holding the sun and the moon ... picking the stars, there is no such person as me ..." Ha ha, ha ha ... Ha ha laughter ... "

All the darkness and filth gradually dissipated in the pure white light, and only Electrolux's arrogant voice echoed on the seventh floor of the Eternal Tower.

Holding the sun, the moon and the stars, there is no one like me in the world. How arrogant, conceited and pathetic. Once the son of light, the necromancer, the sacred dharma god and the undead of natural disasters, Electrolux went. But when he left this world forever, someone still died for him.