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100
THE YÎ KING.
TEXT.
and an appearance of dignity (commanding reverent regard).
1. The first line, divided, shows the looking of a lad ;-not blamable in men of inferior rank, but matter for regret in superior men.
2. The second line, divided, shows one peeping out from a door. It would be advantageous if it were (merely) the firm correctness of a female.
3. The third line, divided, shows one looking at (the course of) his own life, to advance or recede (accordingly).
4. The fourth line, divided, shows one contemplating the glory of the kingdom. It will be advantageous for him, being such as he is, (to seek) to be a guest of the king.
5. The fifth line, undivided, shows its subject contemplating his own life(-course). A superior man, he will (thus) fall into no error.
6. The sixth line, undivided, shows its subject contemplating his character to see if it be indeed that of a superior man. He will not fall into error.
XX. The Chinese character Kwân, from which this hexagram is named, is used in it in two senses. In the Thwan, the first paragraph of the treatise on the Thwan, and the paragraph on the Great Symbolism, it denotes showing, manifesting; in all other places it denotes contemplating, looking at. The subject of the hexagram is the sovereign and his subjects, how he manifests himself to them, and how they contemplate him. The two upper, undivided, lines belong to the sovereign; the four weak tines below them are his subjects,-ministers and others who look up at him. Kwan is the hexagram of the eighth month.
In the Thwan king Wăn symbolises the sovereign by a wor. shipper when he is most solemn in his religious service, at the commencement of it, full of sincerity and with a dignified carriage.
Line 1 is weak, and in the lowest place, improper also for it;
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