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Farm Girl's Manor

[Farming]+[Space]+[Heartwarming]+[Prosperity]+[Defeating Scum] Mo Yan, reduced to ashes by an explosion, was reborn in ancient times, becoming a little farm girl on the run from famine! Above her, a kind and handsome Scholar father - not bad! Below her, a lively and adorable pair of younger siblings - very good! But really, she felt like dying all over again, you know? On the run, going without food, drink, or shelter was one thing, but to always guard against bad guys who might capture her to fill their bellies was another! Luckily, her upgradable Space from the previous life followed her, but what the heck - that amazing Space with mountains, water, and meat to eat had been formatted! Faced with a desperate situation, Mo Yan reignited her fighting spirit: So what if it's formatted, I'll still make a fortune and build my wealth right at the foot of the Imperial City! Carving out mountains, planting orchards, buying shops, building houses... not one less! But... there are so many green-eyed troublemakers! Your farm is yours? Here, I'll trap you to death without discussion! Want to be my stepmom? Fine, I'll send you a bunch of widowers! Mother looking for you? Here, take the divorce papers, keep them, don't thank me! ... What? A handsome man is proposing? Uh, this... should I throw myself at him? PS: 1. Insist on farming without wavering + atypical domestic skirmish + no palace intrigue 2. The writing style is fairly serious, and values are normal (not excluding the occasional whimsy of the author) Links to completed works: [Abandoned Farm Girl: A Beautiful Countryside] Link: http://read.xxsy.net/info/527965.html [The General's Legitimate Daughter Not to be Messed With] Link: http://read.xxsy.net/info/473776.html

Dusk is cold · 历史言情
分數不夠
1414 Chs

Chapter 386: Beware of Kidney Deficiency_4

Mo Yan was momentarily taken aback, only then realizing that this fellow had been wanting her to examine him from the start. For a moment, she truly didn't know what to say.

In that era, if a family were childless, people generally blamed the woman, or else there wouldn't be such contempt for women unable to bear children, comparing them to "hens that don't lay eggs." Many women were divorced and sent back to their parents' home, often for the reason that they had "produced nothing."

Nobody thought that the inability to conceive could be a man's fault, and even if someone did ponder this, they wouldn't easily voice it unless a doctor had examined the issue and confirmed the fact. However, for a man to let a doctor investigate such matters was seen as a disgrace; even if the issue was his own, he would hide it and let no one know.