Chapter 296 Monk Jin
Jin Monk, people from all cities. His father was a scoundrel and sold him to the Wulian Mountain Temple for hundreds of copper coins. Monk Jin has a stubborn personality. He never reads scriptures and practice meditation. He releases pigs every day and has a low status. Soon after, the master died. When he was dying, he gave the monk dozens of liang of broken silver. Monk Jin left the temple with this silver, went out to travel, did business, speculatively, and worked hard. In a few years, he sought huge profits and made a lot of money.
After becoming rich, Monk Jin bought thousands of hectares of fertile land and accepted a wide range of disciples. Build houses, make friends with officialdom, and have a prominent position. Monk Jin is rough and has no elegant bones all over his body. He lives a luxurious life and has a good masculine style. He raises more than a dozen beautiful teenagers in the house and has fun every day.
Later, the monk adopted another adopted son and taught him to read. The adopted son was smart and soon passed the examination. The monk's status rose with the tide and became more and more noble.
Not long after, the monk died of illness. His disciples went to his funeral, played gongs and drums, and was buried in the scenery. The cemetery covered an area of dozens of mu, with thousands of households and magnificent spirit. Tens of thousands of ordinary officials and businessmen came to mourn, crowded, old, young, men, women, holding children, and big bellies, came to see the bustle. A pregnant woman squeezed into the crowd. Her stomach hurt and she would be in labor at any time. Her companions were so anxious that they covered their eyes with skirts and formed a cloth wall. The pregnant woman gave birth under the skirt. After that, she heard the child's crying, and she couldn't tell whether it was a man or a woman.
It's really a spectacle to give birth in full view of the public.
After the monk's death, he divided the property into two, half to the adopted son and half to the disciples. All the disciples were all monks, living with the adopted son, calling them brothers and closely connected.