There is no biography of Sui Shu written by Wang Tong. Although Wang Ji (his younger brother), Wang Bo (his grandson) and Wang Zhi's "Biographies of the Old and New Tang Dynasties" are all mentioned, they are all very brief, and they are called Confucianism at the end of Sui Dynasty. Referring to other documents, we can generally know that Wang Tong was born in an official family, and his father Wang Long had been waiting for the imperial edict from Dr. Guo Zi at the beginning of Emperor Wen of Sui Dynasty, and played seven articles of "On the Gains and Losses of VI" to Emperor Wen of Sui Dynasty, which was praised by Emperor Wen of Sui Dynasty. The Wangs have deep roots, so Wang Tong was influenced by Confucianism since he was a child. There is a record of "fifteen years as a teacher" in Li Zhongshuoming, which shows that Wang Tong was proficient in Confucianism and knowledgeable when he was a teenager.
According to legend, in the third year of Emperor Wendi's Renshou (603), Wang Tong once "traveled west to Chang 'an, met Emperor Wendi, played twelve strategies for peace, respected the king, pushed the tyrant slightly, and examined archaeology today". But it has never been reused. On the recommendation of fellow countryman Xue Daoheng, he was awarded Shu Shu Zuo Shu and Shu Wang Shi Lang. Wang Tong was not satisfied, and soon "abandoned his official position and returned as a lecturer".
After Wang Tong abandoned his official position and returned to his hometown, he devoted himself to studying the Six Classics of Confucius. It is said that he was educated by Li Yu in the East China Sea, studied Xia Jing poetry in Huiji and paid tribute to Guan in Hedong. He is very happy to learn from his father Zhonghua in Beiping. After some textual research, Wang Tong realized that he was great, so he pretended to be a "saint" and imitated Confucius to write the Six Classics of Wang, or continued it. He began to give lectures in his hometown of Bainiuxi. "There are often hundreds of masters, only Henan Dong Heng, Nanyang Cheng Yuan, Zhongshan Jia Qiong, Hedong Xue Shou, Taishan Yao Yi, Taiyuan Wen Yanbo, Jingzhao Du Yan and so on. More than ten people are handsome, and Yao Yi is generous, so he can be reasonable; Xue Shou understands, Fang Zhi Zhuang Zhou. " This record is generally credible. Fang, a famous courtier in the early Tang Dynasty and a disciple of Wang Tong, was obviously forged by Hu La.