Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography and portraiture - What are the eyes behind Hu Bayi?

What are the eyes behind Hu Bayi?

The ghost blew out the lamp, and the eyes on Hu Bayi's back were the marks of the dead woman who sacrificed to the evil Luo Haicheng.

What happened to the long eyes on Hu Bayi's back? Why are you behind Hu Bayi? It is reported that Hu Bayi's eyes were left when he followed the archaeological team to the hinterland of the desert to look for Jingjue country. Because he saw a ghost hole in the tomb of Queen Jingjue, he was cursed. According to the book, this mark is shaped like an eyeball and is located on the scapula.

This curse is the curse of the women who died in the evil Luo Haicheng. Let's take a look with Bian Xiao.

The mark cursed by the bottomless ghost hole is not obvious, although it is only the initial stage, but within a month or two, it will gradually become obvious, giving birth to a mark that looks like a whirlpool and an eyeball. People who suffer from this vicious curse, like us, will gradually reduce hemoglobin in their blood at the age of forty, and the blood in their veins will gradually turn into yellow mud, torturing the living into hungry ghosts in hell.

In the play, Yang Ping is the descendant of the Ghost Cave Prophet in Jingjue Ancient City, that is, the descendant of Zaghla Ma tribe, a poor tribe that has been cursed and almost perished. The original description of the eyes behind Hu Bayi in the novel;

In ancient times, there was an unnamed tribe called "San", which was called "Zagrama tribe" for the time being. People from the tribe migrated from the distant European continent and lived in Zagrama Mountain for many years, until people inadvertently found a bottomless ghost hole on the mountainside.

The wizards in the clan told everyone that in the ancient East, there was a golden jade giant eye that could see the truth of the ghost cave, so they imitated and made the same jade eye to worship the ghost cave, and bad luck befell this tribe from then on.