Responses
![](https://pic1.mangapicgallery.com/r/avatar/5b/u404636_50x50.jpg?2)
Yup, scroll down in the comments page for more discussion. I believe this is revealed in Chapter Four when Lord Yoon discovers the poem Scholar Inhun plagiarized in Nakyum’s painting materials.
And for clarification it’s on: iweb7.mangapicgallery.com/imgfiles/yahwacheop/4/049.png
iweb7.mangapicgallery.com/imgfiles/yahwacheop/4/050.png
The other way it could go with Scholar Inhun’s poem and its plot relevance is that it is a very romantic poem — if Inhun were to publicly condemn Lord Yoon over his homosexuality, all Lord Yoon would have to do is produce the plagiarized poem Scholar Inhun gave to his student, the lowborn painter of erotic homosexual acts from a kisaeng and Inhun’s reputation would be destroyed. Turning the poem Nakyum treasured into the poison tipped arrow that killed his first love.
Truly depends on how fucked up this story aims to be. Does the author want Lord Yoon and Scholar Inhun to destroy each other and in turn ruin Nakyum’s heart beyond repair and end in tragedy? Or do they wish to begin revealing one monster only to unveil the real monster as the one who hides behind letters and virtue? Having Nakyum lose his innocence, but not his hope?
We’ve got no choice but to wait and see.