Luck, a most mysterious thing, the source of all wonders.
This is the description of luck from ancient Taoist scriptures. The path of luck is lofty and unpredictable. In ancient times, cultivators would often attribute their unmentionable fortuitous encounters to luck and virtue. The classic sayings "This thing should belong to me" and "This thing belongs to the virtuous" came from this.
In ancient books and Taoist scriptures, there are many records of the works of luck. However, among ten authors, there are ten who don't actually understand it. In ancient times, luck was even more obscure, and producing a child of luck was considered a major event. In ancient times, the so-called child of luck, by today's standards, would only be about eight or nine feet tall, considered middle-upper rank in the Taichu Palace.
