Heat hammered the plain as ten suns climbed the sky together; smoke and light forced villagers from their houses, and Hou Yi tightened his grip on a bow he feared he might need.
The story of the Ten Suns is not just one of rebellion but also of heroism, of a brave archer named Hou Yi, and of the consequences that arise when nature's balance is disturbed.
The Rising of the Ten Suns
In the ancient times, the ten suns lived together in a grand celestial palace high above the earth. These brothers were children of the great Emperor of Heaven, Di Jun, and his wife, Xihe, goddess of the sun. Each day one sun climbed into a chariot of golden rays, driven by a dragon, and swept across the sky to light the world. After the journey, the sun descended into the dark sea, where the next brother waited to rise.
They had done this for ages. After so long, some grew restless. “Why take turns?” one asked. “Wouldn't it be better if we rose together and filled the sky with our light?”
A few hesitated, remembering their father's warning. Di Jun had said, “You must not rise together. The world is not meant to endure such light all at once. You will destroy it.”
But temptation won. The eldest, bolder than the rest, urged them on. "Father does not understand," he said. "We are stronger together. The earth will rejoice in our warmth."
So, against their father's orders, the ten rose together.
The world below was immediately engulfed in blinding light. Rivers dried to cracked channels; plows left furrows of dust where seed had once lain. Crops blackened and curled, their green gone in an hour, and animals fled with mouths open, gasping for any breath that would cool them.
People ran from shade to shade, then from shade to ruined shade, hauling children and beasts and the small stores they could not bear to lose. Smoke climbed in ragged columns where forests caught fire; whole ridges glowed at night. Mountains oozed steam from hairline fissures that split open under the heat, and the seas began to steam at the edges as salt water turned to mist. The air itself changed. It tasted metallic and dry on the tongue; every breath burned the back of the throat.
The sun’s light seared the skin like a brand. Pots left on hearths popped and cracked. Wells went silent; once it was possible to hear frogs, and birds, and the whisper of wind through rice—now there was only an endless, tinning hush broken by the distant snap of timber and the soft, human sounds of sobbing and shouted prayers. Villagers formed lines at the last running springs, passing water hand to hand, their arms reddened and shaking. Elders chanted old prayers, voices thin from smoke, while children clung to knees and blinked in a light that never dimmed.
Traders abandoned wagons; traders and farmers stood side by side, watching fields they would no longer farm without rain. The heat turned stories into ash and history into a smell that would not leave the clothes. In one valley, a bell kept ringing until its rope burned through and fell silent, the sound swallowed as if the sky refused to carry it. For a while the suns seemed pleased, seeing the world convulse beneath them. Then the pleas rose in a flood—shouts, weeping, a hundred small torches of grief that grew louder than their laughter.
That swell of human sound reached even the halls of the palace, where the gods could no longer ignore the damage being done. At first the suns laughed, delighted by their power. Then the cries of people pierced the air; the land did not rejoice but burn. The joy turned to horror as the earth began to die.
The Plea to Di Jun
From his palace, Di Jun and Xihe watched the destruction. Xihe begged him to act. "Stop them," she cried. "The world will not survive this." Di Jun sent messengers to his sons, but the suns, drunk on their own blaze, ignored the pleas.
Desperate, Di Jun called on Hou Yi, a mortal renowned for his skill. Hou Yi knelt before the god and promised to try. Di Jun gave him a magical bow and ten arrows carved from dragon bone. "If they do not listen," Di Jun warned, "you must shoot them down. Aim true. Save the earth."


















