According to the general image and plot described in the novel, we can probably imagine the pattern and shape of the Kowloon coffin. There is no standard fixed image of the Kowloon coffin, and the tattoo patterns we see are all created by the tattoo artist himself. There is no fixed statement about the meaning of the tattoo on the coffin in Kowloon, and who is pulled in the coffin in Kowloon is also a question of interest to everyone. From the analysis of the content of the novel, most people think that the coffin in Kowloon is heaven, not the barren emperor that some people thought before.
It's worth talking about the taboo and stress about the tattoo of Kowloon coffin. The nine dragons described in the novel are all real dragon five claws, which are rare in the tattoo industry. The real five-claw dragon is not tattooed by ordinary people, because people think that the five-claw dragon can't resist, and the most common thing is to tattoo a four-claw dragon, let alone nine claws. There is a folk rumor about dragon tattoo: Kowloon was born in troubled times, so it is a very bad tattoo to pull the coffin in Kowloon, and it is best for ordinary people not to tattoo it. Although a little superstitious, it also belongs to a folk tattoo culture.