
同类推荐
疯爷傻妃闹翻天
现代特工千羽寒在一次暗杀行动中饮弹身亡,醒来时发现自己穿越到了古代同名同姓的傻女千羽寒身上。千羽寒人虽傻,出身却好,父亲是骠骑大将军,母亲是皇上嫡亲长姐,她是骠骑大将军府的嫡长女,还与当今太子指腹为婚。因此,她遭到府中庶妹的多次迫害,就连太子也嫌弃她是傻子,生死关头弃她而去。这也就罢了,还被人设计嫁与西凤国的疯癫王爷奕绝。据说,无忧王爷药石无灵,颠狂起来,就挖人的眼珠子当弹珠,割人的耳朵当鱼饵,剁掉人的手脚去喂狗;据说,无忧王爷愚不可及,行为荒诞不经,在府中乱点鸳鸯谱,逼公狗和母鸡成婚,母狗和公猫洞房。据说,无忧王爷酷爱女色,为了选妃,下令在民间大招美女进府,却无一合意。结果无忧王在所有的女子脸上写了个大大的“丑”,让他的三千家丁押着这群丑女浩浩荡荡游街示众。好吧,既然这段姻缘上应天意,下顺民心,那她嫁吧!本以为他们一个疯一个傻,便可躲过皇宫那些明刀暗枪,活得逍遥自在。谁知阴谋一个个接踵而至,各派势力欲置他们于死地而后快!来而不往非礼也!谁让她吃一分苦,她便还谁十分难!哼!不让她活?她偏要风风光光地活着,将那些鬼魅魍魉狠狠地践踏在脚下!精彩片段一:“有山贼?太好啦,绝哥哥,我还没见过山贼到底长什么样呢,我想去瞧瞧呢!”“寒儿想去瞧便去!”奕绝宠溺地刮刮羽寒的琼鼻,将羽寒从马车里抱出来,共骑上一匹系着大红花的马,“踢踏踢踏”地朝队伍前去会山贼去。来到队伍的最前排,奕绝从西凤国带来的那三千兵马早已一字儿形竖开,一千人左右的山贼队伍,劲装黑衣朦脸,横排在我方队伍之中,首领朗朗开口:“此树是我栽,此路是我开,要从此路过,留下新娘来!”“噗!”千羽寒忍俊不禁,难道这群山贼只劫色不劫财?离开东辰国前,可是有东辰皇赏赐的黄金万两,珠宝无数,绫罗绸缎几十车,他们却明言只抢新娘子?真是让人好生纳闷儿。“放你娘的狗屁!”还不等羽寒开口,一旁的奕绝竟然脸红脖子粗骂开了,“敢抢本王的新娘子,看我不将你们全俺了,卖去伶人馆作娼!”听到堂堂无忧王,竟然这么不顾仪态开骂,千羽寒笑得更欢了,暗赞这爷真是对姐儿的胃口!“杀!”贼首领大概是嘴上功夫不怎样,被奕绝骂得愣了一小会,直接抽剑高喊,“抢新娘!”一时,双方立即展开了血战。精彩片段二:“洞房!”千羽寒如墨般的眸子眨了眨,嘴角微微弯起一抹狡黠的狐度,“顾名思义,就是在房里打洞!”任逍遥之前世因今世果
江湖风云四起,所有的恩怨情仇都将在此得以解决,在这江湖乱世,三国争霸中,命定中的那五人又将扮演着何种身份?在次次的轮回中,那遥远的记忆已经支离破碎,他们是否还能忆起自己的使命,结束这场江湖恩怨纠纷,改写千年前悲剧的再次发生?无耻某人趁着月黑风高,对着被蒙上双眼的那人宣誓着他的主权:“丫头,不要喜欢别人,你,是我的!”蒙眼遮面是想怎样?欺我瞒我还想这么容易抱得美人归?趁着某人还在忙,拎包带上姐们悄悄溜走,江湖逍遥,何不乐哉?
热门推荐
憋宝人(江河湖海里的诡异事件)
南派三叔极力推荐的作家,一部带您认识真实存在的水怪,追溯水怪源头、种族、习性的禁忌冒险小说 !20年前,晋陕黄河大峡谷中惊现一头房子般大的巨龟,古老神秘的憋宝人重出江湖,身怀绝技的白袍少年,一座由死人组建的鬼魅阴城……黄河古道中潜伏的铁头龙王,长江三峡神秘的蛟龙,雅鲁藏布江食人怪兽,新疆喀纳斯湖巨型水怪,种种迹象,全部指向出那个水下隐藏了数百年的秘密。Opened Ground
This volume is a much-needed new selection of Seamus Heaney's work, taking account of recent volumes and of the author's work as a translator, and offering a more generous choice from previous volumes. Opened Ground: Poems 1966-1996 comes as close to being a 'Collected Poems' as its author cares to make it. It replaces his New Selected Poems 1966-1987, giving a fuller selection from each of the volumes represented there and adding large parts of those that have appeared since, together with examples of his work as a translator from the Greek, Latin, Italian and other languages. The book concludes with 'Crediting Poetry', the speech with which Seamus Heaney accepted the 1995 Nobel Prize in Literature, awarded to him, in the words of the Swedish Academy of Letters, for his 'works of lyrical beauty and ethical depth'.