I can at least easily answer the first question.The emperor did not poison his wife. She willingly took the poison…
Well, yes. But my point is that she knew, and chose to take it anyway due to her devotion to him.
In my opinion, if he forced her, then he was the one who poisoned her. But because she took it knowingly and willingly, not even wanting to resist, it was really her own choice. So whether he poisoned her or she poisoned herself is maybe debatable, I guess?
Bottom line is that she knew, and he knew that she knew, and he was glad that she was so mindlessly devoted so as to willingly take deadly poison for him.
Ive got some doubts1. Did the emperor poisoned his wife in the first place and if he did why he said i did not…
I can at least easily answer the first question.
The emperor did not poison his wife. She willingly took the poison herself and died.
...There are plenty of plot holes for the rest of your questions that make it all hard to understand. They could have fixed these while still keeping the show short by adding more storybuilding, but they chose not to. Ultimately, a lot of their choices and motivations are up to our own imaginations, I suppose.
In my opinion, if he forced her, then he was the one who poisoned her.
But because she took it knowingly and willingly, not even wanting to resist, it was really her own choice.
So whether he poisoned her or she poisoned herself is maybe debatable, I guess?
Bottom line is that she knew, and he knew that she knew, and he was glad that she was so mindlessly devoted so as to willingly take deadly poison for him.
The emperor did not poison his wife. She willingly took the poison herself and died.
...There are plenty of plot holes for the rest of your questions that make it all hard to understand. They could have fixed these while still keeping the show short by adding more storybuilding, but they chose not to. Ultimately, a lot of their choices and motivations are up to our own imaginations, I suppose.