WSMTATMC C122
by berryChapter 122
The weather remained fine that day. In the morning, the sunlight was bright and warm, falling gently on the studentsâ backs.
Inside the examination compound, the scholars bent furiously over their desks, eager to pour everything they had learned in their lives onto the answer sheets, hoping for a leap into glory.
The third session tested **policy essays (çéź, cewen)**Âč. This originated in the Han dynasty, when Emperor Wen would issue questions on bamboo slips to the virtuous and capable, especially in times of great disasters or national crisis, asking their advice. Over time, this practice evolved into a regular examination section.
The âpolicy questionsâ focused on governance and the welfare of the stateâmatters of politics, peopleâs livelihoods, and administration. It was essentially the ancient form of a political or argumentative essay.
By the Wu dynasty era, its form was fairly fixed. The essay began with a summary of the issue, proceeded to an analysis, then concluded with oneâs own solution.
Policy essays tested not just literary talent but oneâs grasp of governance and current affairs. This was precisely why poor, rural students so rarely roseâit wasnât that they lacked intelligence, but they lacked access to teachers and reliable information about state affairs.
At the county exam level, however, the policy questions were usually simple, not requiring deep knowledge. With a little careful thought, most could write a decent response. But, once reaching the xiangshi (provincial) exam, questions involved national issues. Without guidance and news, some poor students couldnât even comprehend the topic.
That dayâs question was âOn River Defense and Flood Controlâ (He Fang FanglĂŒe), clearly linked with the Jizhou floods. It had been set deliberately in light of the recent disaster.
Many students themselves had survived the floods, some losing family. Such memories gave their writing vivid pain and conviction. But those who only cursed corrupt officials without offering actual solutions would surely be failed.
Chen Qingyan paused briefly, then put brush to paper:
*âIn the spring of Wuhe fourth year, student Chen Qingyan of Jizhou humbly submits words on the matter of river defense to the Heavenly Court. The Yellow River is the lifeblood of the world. Since Yu the Great dredged the Nine Rivers, since Duke Zhou laid out the wellâfield system, never since the Three Dynasties has there been flooding such as in this reign. Looking at Jizhou and below, dikes bristle like scales, yet still the muddy torrent bursts without cease.âŠ
In times past, Su Dongpo governed Xu, using stone embankments to tame sudden swells. Wang Anshi in Yin built reservoirs to balance drought and flood. Yet today the Minister of Works sighs beneath the roof while the River Spirit laughsâmust we sit awaiting the Yellow River to run clear?â*ÂČ
After carefully reviewing his own answer, verifying no errors, he put down the brush and waited for collection.
The gong sounded. All students laid aside their brushes. Proctors gathered papers, which would be marked that very day, with results arranged in ranking for the following session.
After submission, the candidates dispersedâsome to latrines, others to eat. Debate over answers was kept light. After all, oneâs essay felt like oneâs own childâeveryone thought theirs best, but mere arguments would only breed distraction.
At noonâs end, the afternoon brought the fourth session: regulated poetry (lĂŒfu), which happened to be Qinghuaiâs specialty.
The prompt was âSpring Snow,â requiring a freeâform poem.
All three brothers finished easily, even submitting early, meeting outside.
By this point, the rankings were mostly determined. As long as the fifth session went smoothly, little could change.
That final session was a mixed test, combining elements from all previous sectionsâprecisely to guard against cheating by repetition.
Outside the hall, Wang Ying and Uncle Chen waited. On the carriage, Wang Ying clasped Qingyanâs hand: âWell, were the two papers all right?â
Qingyan nodded. âI played steadily. If no accident, the result should be tenâtenths secure.â
For someone so usually reserved, such words of confidence meant near certainty. Were there not others present in the carriage, Wang Ying would have embraced and kissed him then and there.
Meanwhile, at the yamen the next day, six examinersâeach a Jinshi (doctoral degree holder)Âłâgathered to mark.
The over 100 papers were first anonymized and bound, names hidden, to ensure impartiality, then divided among the examiners.
First, the rough screening: any paper with sloppy handwriting, erasures, or stains was discarded outright. About twenty papers fell this way, leaving around eighty for careful grading.
Indeed, legible, elegant handwriting was half the battle. With only five slots available, harried examiners glanced quickly through most essays, but papers beautiful in calligraphy drew closer reading.
Thus, the three Chen brothersâ papers were pulled aside, marked in red circlesâmeaning âpass.â
Their writing was meticulous, their answers solid. Their scripts stood as if towering above the restâso much so it seemed like they âdescended from another level.â
Exam Chief Jiang nodded repeatedly over Qingyanâs essay. âSubstantial content! Excellent style! Even at the provincial exam, this would stand high.â
Another praised: âUnbelievable that this is work of mere tongsheng (basic student).â
On Qinghuaiâs poetry they exclaimed: â âThe snow, impatient at tardy spring, scatters blossoms of white through garden trees.â Such wording! Extraordinaryâwell beyond ordinary pupils.ââŽ
Yet comparing their works, Qingyanâs policy essay was superior, so he was placed first (Anshou æĄéŠ), Qinghuai second. Third was Zhao Wenzhou of Wuyang Town. Fourth was Zhang Wuyou of Longquan. Fifth was Qingsong himself.
With results decided, clean transcripts were copied for public posting. Original scripts were sealed and stored at the prefecture archives.
The following day came the fifth and final exam.
Now, order of entry was set by ranking of prior results. Qingyan was called twentyâfirstâhis heartbeat roared like war drums.
âQingshui TownâChen Qingyan!â
Startled for a moment, he raised his hand boldly. âPresent!â and strode inside.
âQingshui TownâChen Qinghuai!â
âPresent.â His elder brotherâs eyes reddened. Both brothers, so close in number, now in glory as well.
Whispers rose in the ranks:
âBrothers, surely?â
âYesâdidnât it say from Qingshui Town?â
âIncredible. A whole family of scholars!â
âTruly soâŠâ
âSilence!â barked the officer. The queue settled.
Soon the fifth was called: âQingshui TownâChen Qingsong!â
Qingsong, wideâeyed, ran forward clutching his basket. âPresent!â he cried.
Students behind muttered. âAll three? Out of five slots, the Chen clan takes three? Isnât there corruption here?â
Even parents waiting outside began whispering suspicions.
Chen Qingyun fumed, wanting to argue, but Wang Ying held her back. âLet them talk. When results post in two days, everyone can read the actual essays. Then ability will be plain as day.â
For now, any protests would only fan gossip.
Inside, the boys wrote steadily. For others, nerves broke them. Some wept, pounding desksâyears of toil for nothing. The proctors only threatened to expel them. Tears earned no leniency; only words on paper mattered.
As the sandâclock drained, the gong sounded. Papers collected. The magistrate gave the closing remarks.
Brothersâ eyes met. For the first time in all these daysâthey smiled. At last it was over. The great weight lifted.
At home, Wang Ying had already booked a celebratory banquet. Two tables crowded with family. This time, relief alone was feast enough.
Cao Kun even brought out a treasured cask of fiery spirits from the northwest, hoarded for years. âFor our three brothersâ triumph!â
Qingyan demurred. âIt is early. The list is not yet out.â
But Liangâlao waved aside: âI saw the rankings myself. If somehow the posted results differ, Iâll go to the prefecture, demand justice myself.â
Li Shi chuckled. âWonât others accuse us of using power for favors?â
Wang Ying laughed: âYou jest. At todayâs roll call our three were all read together. Envious stares were everywhere! Of course theyâll talk.â
âTrulyâmany murmured about us using back doors.â Qingyun added bitterly.
But Liangâlao only smiled with his wine cup. âThey are but frogs staring at Heaven from the bottom of a well. They cannot discern. Wait for the autumn examsâthen open their eyes properly.â
The three brothers felt their teacherâs unspoken recognition. He scolded often, but in fact, he was proud. That warmth contented them more than even first place.
The day after, Liangâlao prepared to leave for his sonâs household for a time.
The whole family reluctant, they still escorted him. âMaster, take care on the road.â
He waved them off. âNo worries with Liang An and Chen Guang. But youâthe county exam is the beginning. Ahead still lies the prefecture exam, the academy exam, the autumn provincial. Prepare well, do not idle.â
âYes,â the trio bowed deeply, watching until his carriage vanished from sight. Then, without anyone urging, they all went straight back to the study, practicing, reading, copyingânone dared slack.
Two days later, the list was posted.
All three brothersâ names were on it.
Visitors thronged to their humble householdâyesterday barren of callers, today bustling with distinguished guests.
And of course, with it came families seeking inâlaw bonds. Talented sons attract marriage hopes; neighbors sought to matchmake, seeing promising futures.
Footnotes:
- Cewen / Policy essay (çéź) â Exam section where students answered practical national governance problems; a key measure of talent for administration.
- The sample passage mixes classical references: Yu the Great (flood control), Su Dongpoâs flood dikes, Wang Anshiâs reservoirs. The phrase âto wait for the Yellow River to clearâ meant âto wait forever for the impossible.â
- Jinshi (èżćŁ«) â The highest, doctoralâlevel degree in the exam system, typically reserved for those who had triumphed in the palace exams at the capital.
- Poetic couplet (æ„éȘéąè”) â Praise of spring snow: âWhite snow, impatient with tardy spring, pierces through the courtyard trees, scattering as blossoms.â Such refined lines impressed examiners as beyond ordinary county students.