The morning and the evening star

Summary


"The Morning and the Evening Star" is a short Chinese myth that tells of two celestial brothers, Tschen and Shen, sons of the Golden King of the Heavens. After a bitter quarrel ends in a violent blow, the two stars swear never to look upon each other again — one banished to the evening sky, the other to the morning. Their eternal separation becomes a quiet warning about brotherhood, pride, and the lasting cost of broken bonds between those who should be closest.

Read Online

Once upon a time there were two stars, sons of the Golden King of the Heavens. The one was named Tschen and the other Shen. One day they quarreled, and Tschen struck Shen a terrible blow.

Thereupon both stars made a vow that they would never again look upon each other. So Tschen only appears in the evening, and Shen only appears in the morning, and not until Tschen has disappeared is Shen again to be seen.

And that is why people say: “When two brothers do not live peaceably with one another they are like Tschen and Shen.


Credits

Richard Wilhelm was a German sinologist and theologian best known for bringing classical Chinese texts to Western readers in the early twentieth century. He is perhaps most celebrated for his landmark translation of the I Ching. This brief myth reflects his deep engagement with Chinese folk tradition and his gift for preserving the spare, resonant quality of the original oral sources.