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Khwan
(represents) what is great and originating, penetrating, advantageous, correct
and having the firmness of a mare. When the superior man (here intended) has to
make any movement, if he take the initiative, he will go astray; if he follow,
he will find his (proper) lord. The advantageousness will be seen in his
getting friends in the south-west, and losing friends in the north-east. If he
rest in correctness and firmness, there will be good fortune.
(The lines of
this hexagram are all weak and divided, as appears from) the use of the number
six. If those (who are thus represented) be perpetually correct and firm,
advantage will arise.
The same
attributes are here ascribed to Khwan, as in the former hexagram to Kh\zn ;—but
with a difference. The figure, made up of six divided lines, expresses the
ideal of subordination and docility. The superior man, repiesented by it, must
not take the initiative, and by following he will find his lord,—the subject,
that is of JfMen. Again, the correctness and firmness is defined to be that of
'a mare,' 'docile and stiong,' but a creature for the service of man. That it
is not the sex of the animal which the writer has chiefly in mind is plain fiom
the immediate mention of the superior man, and his lord.
That superior man
will seek to bring his friends along with himself to serve his ruler. But
according to the arrangement of the trigrams by king Wan. the place of Khwan is
in the south-west, while the opposite quarter is occupied by the yang trigram
Kan, as in Figuie 2, Plate III. All that this portion of the Thwan says is an
instruction to the subject of the hexagram to seek for others of the same
principles and tendencies with himself to serve their common lord. But in
quietness and firmness will be his strength.
The symbolism of
the lines is various. Paragraph 2 presents to us the earth itself, according to
the Chinese conception of it, as a great cube. To keep his excellence under
restraint, as in paragraph 3, is the part of a minister or officer, seeking not
his own glory, but that of his ruler. Paragraph 4 shows its subject exercising
a still greater restraint on himself than in paragraph 3. There is an
interpretation of the symbolism of paragraph 5 in a narrative of the 3° JSTwan,
under the 12th year of duke Kh&o, b.c. 530. 'Yellow' is one of the five
'correct' colours, and the colour of the earth. ' The lower garment' is a
symbol of humility. The fifth line is the seat of honour. If its occupant
possess the qualities indicated, he will be greatly fortunate.
See the note on
the sixth line of hexagram 1. What is there said to be 'beyond the proper
limits' takes place here 'in the wild.' The humble subject of the divided line
is transformed into a dragon, and fights with the true dragon, the subject of
the undivided line. They fight and bleed, and their blood is of the colour
proper to heaven or the sky, and the colour proper to the earth. Paragraph 7
supposes that the hexagram Khwan should become changed into KAien ;—the result
of which would be good. |  |  |