mirror of
https://github.com/Koko-boya/Grasscutter_Resources
synced 2024-01-31 23:23:19 +08:00
21 lines
1.9 KiB
Plaintext
21 lines
1.9 KiB
Plaintext
|
|
A beauteous item fashioned from rare natural glaze.
|
|
Legend has it that the Eye of Perception was once upon a time as bright, clear and smooth as a lake's surface, but became dulled over the passage of many years.
|
|
Folk records claim that on a still night, one can hear it make soft noises.
|
|
Sometimes it sounds like a mild breeze, other times like a flowing spring.
|
|
|
|
They say that the Eye was an adeptus's heirloom that was passed down in Liyue and eventually found its way into the Yun family.
|
|
Now one day, Yun was strolling about in the mountains, and there they happened to meet an exorcist named Huang, who had come to consult with the adepti.
|
|
Yun spoke with Huang enthusiastically and at length, and gifted the Eye to Huang. When Huang frantically declined, Yun said this with a smile:
|
|
"This pearl is nature's very quintessence. Only one whose heart is clear can use it."
|
|
|
|
Thanking Yun, Huang took the Eye and wore it on his person, and slowly made his way towards Liyue. Along the way, neither rain nor wind impeded him.
|
|
As one who sought after the path of the adepti, Huang wandered the lands without rest. Thus, he would often be at the market to buy water and food.
|
|
The harbor-side streets were a morass of humanity. Yet Huang walked among them as if idle, and was never taken advantage of.
|
|
Some were curious: how could this bookish exorcist take to the city like a fish to water, and never miss a step?
|
|
When asked, he replied: "This Eye trembles at wickedness, and helps me see which hearts are true."
|
|
|
|
This Eye could reveal human hearts, though no one knows how it worked, causing many to fall back on folktales to explain it.
|
|
Some say that at midnight, you can dimly hear it call out like a mild breeze, or like spring water flowing between scattered stones.
|
|
Both are reminiscent of the murmuring of demons that feed on wicked thoughts, a common feature of the parables once told by mothers to their children in days gone by.
|