Elder Peng (simplified: 彭长老, traditional: 彭長老, pinyin: Péng Zhǎnglǎo, jyutping: paang4 zoeng2 lou5) was one of the four Clean-Clothes Elders of the Beggars’ Guild in The Legend of the Condor Heroes and later reappeared in The Return of the Condor Heroes. Vain, perfumed, and obsessed with procedural prestige, he relied on the Capturing Heart Art to cow opponents before defecting to Jin and Mongol patrons in his quest to regain influence.
Biography
Clean-Clothes elder
Peng served alongside Lu Youjiao, Elder Jian, and Elder Liang as the guild’s Clean-Clothes branch. He kept ledgers, presided over etiquette, and measured righteousness by whether a robe was pressed, scorning the Filthy-Clothes fighters. During the Junshan assembly he demanded that Huang Rong prove her succession despite Hong Qigong’s word, unveiling the Capturing Heart Art in front of the gathered heroes.
Downfall and demotion
His ambition peaked when Yang Kang conspired with the Tatars. Peng backed the coup, hoping the Clean-Clothes faction would seize the Dog Beating Staff. Huang Rong exposed the plot by first defeating Elder Jian with the Dog Beating Staff Technique and then reflecting Peng’s hypnosis with a Nine Yin “Soul-Shifting” counter. The guild stripped him of his nine pouches, demoted him to an eight-bag disciple, and banished him from strategy councils.
Wandering conspirator
Exiled, Peng drifted through Jing territory while shadowing Yang Kang. He attempted to assault the exhausted Mu Nianci after she gave birth, only to be mauled and half-blinded by the pair of condors raised by Guo Jing and Huang Rong. In Return of the Condor Heroes he resurfaced at the Dashengguan heroes’ feast disguised as a Mongol officer, whispering advice to Golden Wheel Monk and sowing dissent within the Beggars’ Guild even as Xiangyang braced for siege.
Death in Ci’en’s mountain cabin
Peng’s final scheme targeted Qiu Qianren, now the monk Ci’en under Great Master Yideng. Inside a snowbound mountain hut he used the Capturing Heart Art to trick Ci’en into striking an “enemy” shaped from snow, hoping to implicate his former comrade. Yideng’s spiritual force shattered the hypnosis. When Ci’en regained his senses and recognised the traitor, he unleashed the Iron Palm and killed Peng on the spot, ending the elder’s career of manipulation.
Personality and traits
Peng married courtroom polish with predatory appetites. He quoted guild regulations while perfuming his sleeves, chose patrons by their political weight, and equated spotless robes with moral authority. Beneath the silk gloves lurked a bully who craved status, lashed out when challenged, and yet folded the moment his opponents displayed real conviction.
Martial arts abilities
Capturing Heart Art
Peng’s signature technique relied on eye contact and focused intent to induce dizziness or hesitation in opponents of weaker will. It intimidated ordinary disciples but failed against prodigies such as Huang Rong or masters like Yideng, whose mental discipline reflected the attack back onto Peng.
Steel saber
He paired the hypnotic art with a narrow steel saber, stepping in with diagonal chops once a foe froze. The method terrorised minor enemies yet proved useless against the twin condors and other top-tier fighters, underscoring how dependent his success was on theatrics rather than true power.
Legacy
Elder Peng’s scheming forced the Beggars’ Guild to confront factionalism and reminded later leaders—especially Huang Rong—why procedural legitimacy must be matched with moral integrity. His fall became a cautionary tale cited whenever Clean- and Filthy-Clothes disciples argued over precedence.
Behind the scenes
Jin Yong uses Peng to personify institutional decay: he begins as a capable administrator, then turns to foreign armies and psychological tricks once ambition eclipses loyalty. His death at Ci’en’s hands also ties the Beggars’ Guild storyline to Yideng’s redemption arc, showing how compassion and justice can coexist in the jianghu.
See also
External links
- Elder Peng
- Elder Peng (Chinese)
- Elder Peng (Chinese)