After performing a perilous service for the future Emperor, the peasant
Chen Hsi-wei turns down the customary rewards in favor of receiving an
education. The Court is astonished by this unheard-of request, but
orders the strict teacher Shen Kuo to do what he can with the boy. In
the course of copying out the words of the ancient masters, Hsi-wei
begins writing poems of his own. As a young man, Hsi-wei leaves the
capital for a vagabond life, supporting himself by making straw sandals.
He encounters people of all stations and occupations, trekking through
landscapes both flat and mountainous. He learns of the terrible price of
building the Grand Canal, the miseries caused by floods, droughts, and
endless wars. To his astonishment, Hsi-wei gains a degree of fame, first
as a curiosity, then as a writer whose poems are beloved by the people
and pass into the vast life of China.