
The story opens amid the turmoil of a frontier war, where the emperor watches a violet sky streaked with strange, horse‑head‑shaped clouds as his army falters. A prophetic dream of a yellow‑clad child recurs, whispering riddles that stir his courtiers and fuel rumors of looming disaster. Amid the clash, the sovereign’s curiosity leads him to seek signs in the heavens, interpreting every omen as a guide for his reign.
From the palace’s glittering halls flow an endless parade of exotic treasures—jade whips that bend like silk, a nine‑horned dragon horse, and jeweled beads that glow like captured moonlight. These marvels, presented by distant lands, become symbols of divine favor and political leverage, while the emperor’s inner circle wrestles with loyalty, ambition, and the weight of prophecy. The narrative weaves together battlefield grit, courtly intrigue, and the fragile line between superstition and statecraft, inviting listeners into a world where every artifact may conceal a deeper destiny.
Language
zh
Duration
~20 minutes (19K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2008-04-30
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Known for the classical Chinese work Duyang zabian (杜陽雜編), this writer is an elusive historical figure whose surviving reputation rests mainly on that single text. Modern catalog records commonly list the author under a romanized form such as “Su E.”
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