The Heavenly Sword & the Dragon Sabre Chapter 4 Published
Contents
A man lies in darkness, grief and fury burning too hot to release. This is the quiet before the storm — a short chapter, but one of the most consequential in the novel.
Chapter 4 of The Heavenly Sword and the Dragon Sabre is now live.
At just four parts and roughly 13,500 words, this is the briefest of the chapters we’ve published so far. But its emotional intensity more than compensates for its length. Zhang Cuishan — “Silver Hook, Iron Brush,” the fifth disciple of Zhang Sanfeng — finds himself at the centre of a crisis that will test everything he believes about honour, loyalty, and the jianghu.
Translation Spotlight
This chapter’s emotional core is Zhang Cuishan’s internal struggle. Jin Yong writes grief with remarkable precision: the fury that has nowhere to go, the bed that becomes a prison, the shichen (two-hour period) that stretches into an eternity. Translating these passages required finding English that carries the same weight without becoming melodramatic.
The chapter also introduces us to the Seven Heroes of Wudang (武当七侠, Wǔdāng Qī Xiá) as an ensemble — Song Yuanqiao, Yu Lianzhou, Zhang Songxi, Yin Liting, and others. Their relationships with each other and with Zhang Sanfeng form the emotional backbone of the early novel.
Cultural Note
The term shichen (时辰) refers to the traditional Chinese two-hour period. A day is divided into twelve shichen, each named after one of the twelve Earthly Branches. When Jin Yong writes that Zhang Cuishan lay in bed for “more than a shichen,” he’s conveying not just the passage of time but the particular rhythm of Chinese temporal experience — slower, more measured, and tied to the natural cycles of the day.
Quality Notes
The Third Edition revisions to this chapter were subtle but important. Jin Yong refined the emotional beats of Zhang Cuishan’s internal monologue and clarified the relationships between the Seven Heroes of Wudang.
Stats
- Word count: ~13,500 words
- Parts: 4 parts for easier reading
- Progress: Chapter 4 of ongoing translation (Chapters 1–5 now available)
Chapter Parts
Read It
⚠️ SPOILERS BELOW — for readers who’ve finished this chapter
Characters in This Chapter
Zhang Cuishan — The fifth disciple of Zhang Sanfeng, known as “Silver Hook, Iron Brush.” A man of honour facing an impossible situation.
Du Dajin — Head of the Dragon Gate Armed Escort, whose actions set this chapter’s crisis in motion.
Song Yuanqiao — Eldest of the Seven Heroes of Wudang, the steady hand of the group.
Yu Lianzhou — Second disciple, known for his swordsmanship.
Zhang Songxi — Fourth disciple, the most perceptive of the Seven Heroes.
Yin Liting — Sixth disciple, whose fate will prove central to the novel.
What to Watch For
- The weight of brotherhood. The Seven Heroes of Wudang are not just fellow disciples — they are brothers. The novel treats their bond as sacred, and any threat to it is felt as a violation of the natural order.
- Zhang Cuishan’s impossible choice. The crisis he faces pits his loyalty to his master against his own moral compass. This is one of Jin Yong’s favourite dilemmas, and it will recur throughout the novel.
- The Dragon Gate Armed Escort. The role of the armed escort (镖局, biāojú) in the jianghu is more than just a plot device — it reflects the real historical importance of these organisations in Ming dynasty China.
What’s Next
Chapter 5 takes us to the Qiantang River and the Six Harmonies Pagoda, where Zhang Cuishan’s journey reaches its first major turning point.
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Happy reading!