
The 62nd story of a full-length business novel.
One day when Caesar entered the Senate, Brutus killed him all of a sudden with his clique by using javelins. (Below was Caesar’s assassination, painted by Vincenzo Camuccino. Source: Wikipedia)
After that, Brutus said vauntingly before the Senate that:
“I loved him but loved Rome much more. So I killed him for the freedom of Rome.”
In this way, he disingenuously justified himself.
Right here, he looked to be a great patriot for the Free World of Rome against the upcoming tyranny. However, it was merely a sophisticated but crooked speech as part of histrionics. Correct, it was a fraudulent cheating itself. And it was a creephole itself. By exploiting it he sought to justify his mean plot and save his life.
Like Brutus, the killer justified his hideous act. For the reason, his men could not stand for their boss. And they could not punish him even if they were berserkers to catch pirates. They pardoned him reluctantly. All of it was the last scene of the Prince of the Yellow Sea. As a result, the rumormill came to be closed up. Nobody came to know who the mastermind of the plot was. The plot was greatly successful. And his assassination became a puzzle forever.
In retrospect, there had been a sinister plot before his assassination. In accordance to the plot, the plotters had hired the assassin and instigated him to kill him at a proper time. Nonetheless, nobody knew of it. For the reason, the underplot was not detected but undemonstrable. Meanwhile, the underplot had been already done successfully. Its final result was his sudden death.
Here, as for the plotters, the cunning underplot was an act of justice. Indeed, to them including the killer, the plot was not related with jealousy or treason against the country. Such thinking, even if it was truly a crooked mind, let them make a harmful plot. Then they killed their potential, political enemy in the end. At this point, the sinister plot was regarded as a patriotic action like the Brutus’ case to Caesar. And their assassination justified the sinister act.
Right here, the most important thing was that:
“Nobody knew the inside of the plotters. The alleged rumor was neither truth nor ‘public opinion’ at all. It was only ‘published opinion’ which was fabricated by the cunning plotters. So it was merely a figment. But it became a plausible truth to the ears of the common people. Right here, the published opinion became the public opinion. Once again, the crooked mind was clothed in justice and the killing became a patriotic act.”
For the very reason, the inhibited mind of the plotters was undetected and undemonstrable. It was almost impossible to find it out. That was the way they liked to play it, that is, assassination. Even at the present as in the past, a sort of James Bond series was and is being produced. And it was, is and will be a big hit. Here, in the 007 agent of SIS (Secret Intelligence Service), the killer was and is the main protagonist of the blockbuster film. In the finale, some intriguing speeches were and are made in the film. A historical drama film, The Conspirator said in the final that:
“One bullet killed the President Abraham Lincoln.
But, not one man.”
(The picture left was extracted from the site http://illustrated007.blogspot.kr/2009/09/ian-fleming-in-intrigue-magazine.html.)
Presumably the final message of the film would be right. Truly, lots of men must have engineered the conspiracy against him. Yes, they were involved in the conspiracy. But their involvement was not discovered (because the plot engineers were the very investigators?). Maybe, it was true. Otherwise, such a presumption might be a reckless imagination.
Nonetheless, the assassination of Chang, Bo-ko, like the case of the President of USA, was not abruptly made by the henchman’s one dagger. There were lots of plotters behind him. But, the specific truth was not found. The truth became a mystery. And the secret of the killing remained as a puzzle. There is nothing to be found in the surface like the case of Lincoln’s assassination. Nobody knows the real face of the underplot. Right here, the plot was thoroughly perfect. And the mission was successfully completed. In the end, the end justified the means. The dead had no mouth. The living killer had only a mouth. And he explained why he had to kill him. His explanation was the only one remaining proof as to why the killing came to happen
Here, vice won virtue. As a result, partisan acts prevailed over patriotism. Factionalism won nationalism. The crooked mind won. Finally, their heartburn was solved. The very point was and is the key to the mean plot.
On the other side, the upmost thing came to be missing. It was that:
“Justice lost and disappeared.”
It was linked with nation building. But ‘Nation Building’ was demolished. In short, doing such a sinister plot was directly to harm the irrevocable cause. That was to destroy their loving nation in a speedy pace. Yes, Shilla was destroyed decades after his death. After that, Korea has never seen such a great merchant Prince of the International Trade among the nations. Never, never, never. . .
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