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The Water Margin

Water Margin (otherwise called Outlaws of the Marsh or All Men Are
Brothers) is a criminal roman created from folktales about the genuine
agitator Song Jiang who drove a worker uprising in the early twelfth
century.

Written

by

Shi

Naian,

writer

from

suzhou.

Happened during the Song dynasty, the story recounts how a gathering of
108 bandits accumulates at Mount Liang (or Liangshan Marsh) to frame
a

sizable armed force before they are in the long run allowed acquittal by
the administration and sent on battles to oppose outside intruders and
smother dissident powers.
The story of Water Margin begins when Marshal Hong Xin is sent to a Taoist monastery to

inquiry a cure for a plague currently being suffered by the people of the Eastern Capital. Hong
causes problems when he orders the Monks of the monastery to free the evils of being held
captive in the suppression of stars, corresponding to the number of evils released, would also
appear in the Earth. These 108 stars, 36 stars of heavenly spirits and 72 stars of earthly spirits,
become the bandits of Liangshan Marsh. They become bandits because they have been framed
by corrupt officials and either forced to do something illegal they aare accused of something they
didnt do. They gather and wait for amnesty to be granted to them so that they can once again
serve their country without the mark of being a criminal.
Not with standing when acquittal came, the criminals are still not totally allowed to serve
their nation. They are first sent to northern China where they crush the attacking Liao powers. At
that point, they are sent to southern China where they figure out how to defeat the attacking
revolutionary powers drove by Fang La. At the point when the chieftains are set to get respects
from the Chinese sovereign, their are just 27 men remaining. All reject the administration
positions offered them with expectations of a quiter acknowledge the initiative parts. Be that as it
may, they are executed by the degenerate authorities who still respect these previous crooks are
foes. Since the ruler never acknowledges it is his own authority who slaughtered Song and Ju,
these authorities are never rebuffed. After their passings, Song and Ju are broadly regarded and
revered.

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