

Therefore, the idiom often refers to a Confucian philosophy that an unjust ruler will lose the Mandate of Heaven and their dynasty will be overthrown by a virtuous person. According to ancient Chinese historians, this celestial event was observed when the scholar-swordsman Jing Ke attempted to assassinate King Zheng of Qin (who later became the emperor Qin Shi Huang), who had been traditionally considered to be a tyrannical dictator. The connotation of the idiom depends on the perspective and the context, but it can have a positive connotation in Confucianism.In ancient China, such a celestial event was regarded as an omen which prophesies a lord will be pierced by an assassin. The Chinese name of the weapon "Lance of Rainbow Piercer" ( Chinese: 贯虹之槊 Guànhóng zhī Shuò) likely refers to the Chinese idiom "a white rainbow pierces the sun" ( Chinese: 白虹贯日 bái hóng guàn rì).
VORTEX VANQUISHER TRIAL
VORTEX VANQUISHER PATCH
Legends have it that since then, one can often see dolphins and whales congregate about that patch of ocean, singing. They believe that Rex Lapis had once wielded a spear that pierced the rainbow, pinning the churning vortex that had once terrorized the oceans in the center of the deep sea. But there is one story that they all believe. Most legends that pass between sailors and skippers are such bizarre ones as these. Still others say that this island is a great monster in a threadbare torpor. They also say that a divine island would emerge from the sea, rainbow-clad and fog-shrouded.Īll who are fortunate enough to set foot on that island will find treasures buried for time incalculable. With great vortexes and whirlpools it would smash even the strongest of ships, and drag its prey down into the sunless depths. They say that a great shadow once dwelt within the oceanic abyss. In those days, Liyue Harbor was not at peace, not from those creatures from the deep. This was an ancient time, when ships sailed alongside sea monsters.
