Kumo Desu ga, Nani ka?

Past editions 8

Since when?

What made Sariel take precedence over other organisms?

The trigger must have been no deflection.

The mission given to Sariel is the protection of native organisms.

That mission was assigned to Saliel, an angel of the battle specialization type, and what that means is to protect native organisms from other gods.

It means don't let other gods interfere, which means that the mission given to Sariel is God's expulsion.

Like other gods, Saliel was not required to interfere with native organisms.

So at first I just watched.

Saliel kept an eye on the world the whole time.

But somehow Sariel started reaching out, not just watching.

The trigger, I'm sure, was really not even deflective.

Just a kid who helped out with a little goodwill.

Being so reclining or nothing as good intentions as to have helped where you fell and woke up.

"Thanks!"

They just thanked me for that.

Such triviality was the beginning.

A stalker is an act that accompanies a particular person.

Naturally, the act of monitoring a specific person is also included in it.

There are differences in the response from country to country, but it is an act that is almost treated as a crime in developed countries.

Crime.

You're the dragon breed, criminal.

Gullier's shock can only be understood by the person in question.

But let me just say that the shock was huge.

Fodoui told me, and as I learned human common sense and doing, Gullier had also gained knowledge of stalking.

And I was depressed.

No way, against the fact that the behavior you were doing for nothing is an abominable act for humans as a crime.

The dragon breed himself is accused of being a stalker, pointing backwards from a human being.

What a humiliation!

At the same time, I feel a sense of crisis in my ignorance additions and subtractions.

I was worried that what I had done was actually outrageous from other people's point of view.

Driven by that anxiety, Gülier learned all the common sense and habits of man.

Dragons don't usually do that.

No matter how you can see it from a human being, you can't shake it.

It is natural for humans to see dragons as sacred.

Because dragons are supreme.

It is also natural for humans to see dragons with strange eyes.

I can't help but understand the supreme existential dragon correctly.

People who don't understand dragons are stupid, and dragons can't behave wrong.

That's normal for dragons.

But, contrary to that, Gülier was disturbed by human language and learned human culture.

At this point, the same dragons begin to see us with strange eyes.

Why should the supreme existential dragon learn the ecology of inferior organisms?

Why should the supreme existential dragon be adapted to inferior organisms?

The dragon should only be as a dragon, and if it is to be combined, the inferior creature should be adapted to the dragon.

Still, Gülier didn't think he was doing the wrong thing.

Nor did Gürier suspect until he met Saliel that the dragon breed was the supreme being.

The encounter with Sariel gave rise to a broom in the idea, and its broom became even greater when it was disputed by Fodoui, a human being.

A dragon is certainly mighty and great.

But is it truly supreme once again?

By force, you're inferior to Sariel, and by mouth, you say you lost to Fodoui?

Doesn't a species exist that is better than a dragon just because you didn't know it?

As a dragon, the idea was heretical, but convincing to Gullier as Ston.

There is no question that dragons are excellent as organisms.

But I recall that it is premature to determine other organisms as inferior because of that.

Then is there something you can learn from a human who has ever despised inferior and wasn't even oriented?

The more we learn about humans, the more certain the question turns into.

The dragon is excellent but therefore does not try to move forward.

Because you don't have to try to be aware of that, but over time, you acquire nature and strength.

And after all that time, intelligence also develops considerably.

A race that can evolve without the need to rush just because it has time to say it is a long time.

That's the dragon.

By contrast, humans don't have time.

It's just a moment from a dragon's point of view, such as a person's life, and in that moment he burns his life to the ground.

The actions you spend your whole life on are eye-catching, and you are seriously confronted with the fact that you live, singing its raw.

While dragons are spending their lives, humans are acting incredibly vigorously.

Even if the consequences it has are trivial from a dragon's point of view, humans are alive.

Lively.

It seems to be Nettle who spends his time doing nothing but doing nothing.

Well, if that theory says so, dragons are all nites.

That's what I thought, and Gülier laughed invisibly.

No matter how powerful you are, even Neat. And if you call me a stalker, I can't help but be ridiculed.

Humans live desperately while dragons do the nite.

As a species, dragons are better.

That is an unquestionable fact.

But looking down on humans as inferior creatures because of that was unlikely to be possible for Gülier anymore.

If I were to sit back on my strengths as a race, I would even feel a sense of crisis that one day would come to the human eye in pain.

Even if you think about it too much, you can learn a lot from the human way of life.

A thank you for making me realize that.

And apologies so far.

And above all, for an answer match, Gürier decides to see Sariel again.

For Sariel does not use the power of God, to give that combination of answers.