The 64 chapters > 43 Kuai: Break-through (Resoluteness) |
43 Kuai: Break-through (Resoluteness)
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The 64 Chapters-43 43 Kuai: Break-through (Resoluteness) |
This hexagram signifies on the one hand a break-through after a long accumulation of tension, as a swollen river breaks through its dikes, or in the manner of a cloudburst. On the other hand, applied to human conditions, it refers to the time when inferior people gradually begin to disappear. Their influence is on the wane; as a result of resolute action, a change in conditions occurs, a break-through. The hexagram is linked with the third month [April-May].
The judgement
BREAK-THROUGH. One must resolutely make the matter known
At the court of the king.
It must be announced truthfully. Danger.
It is necessary to notify one's own city.
It does not further to resort to arms.
It furthers one to undertake something.
Even if only one inferior man is occupying a ruling position in a city, he is
able to oppress superior men. Even a single passion still lurking in the heart
has power to obscure reason. Passion and reason cannot exist side by side- therefore
fight without quarter is necessary if the good is to prevail.
In a resolute struggle of the good against evil, there are, however, definite
rules that must not be disregarded, if it is to succeed. First, resolution must
be based on a union of strength and friendliness. Second, a compromise with
evil is not possible; evil must under all circumstances be openly discredited.
Nor must our own passions and shortcomings be glossed over. Third, the struggle
must not be carried on directly by force. If evil is branded, it thinks of weapons,
and if we do it the favour of fighting against it blow for blow, we lose in
the end because thus we ourselves get entangled in hatred and passion. Therefore
it is important to begin at home, to be on guard in our own persons against
the faults we have branded. In this way, finding no opponent, the sharp edges
of the weapons of evil becomes dulled. For the same reasons we should not combat
our own faults directly. As long as we wrestle with them, they continue victorious.
Finally, the best way to fight evil is to make energetic progress in the good.
The image
The lake has risen up to heaven:
The image of BREAK-THROUGH.
Thus the superior man
Dispenses riches downward
And refrains from resting on his virtue.
When the water of a lake has risen up to heaven, there is reason to fear a cloudburst.
Taking this as a warning, the superior man forestalls a violent collapse. If
a man were to pile up riches for himself alone, without considering others,
he would certainly experience a collapse. For all gathering is followed by dispersion.
Therefore the superior man begins to distribute while he is accumulating. In
the same way, in developing his character he takes care not to become hardened
in obstinacy but to remain receptive to impressions by help of strict and continuous
self-examination.
The lines
Nine at the beginning [yang at bottom] means:
Mighty in the forward-striding toes.
When one goes and is not equal to the task,
One makes a mistake.
In times of resolute advance, the beginning is especially difficult. We feel
inspired to press forward but resistance is still strong; therefore we ought
to gauge our own strength and venture only so far as we can go with certainty
of success. To plunge blindly ahead is wrong, because it is precisely at the
beginning that an unexpected setback can have the most disastrous results.
Nine in the second place means:
A cry of alarm. Arms at evening and at night.
Fear nothing.
Readiness is everything. Resolution is indissolubly bound up with caution. If
an individual is careful and keeps his wits about him, he need not become excited
or alarmed. If he is watchful at all times, even before danger is present, he
is armed when danger approaches and need not be afraid. The superior man is
on his guard against what is not yet in sight and on the alert for what is not
yet within hearing; therefore he dwells in the midst of difficulties as thought
hey did not exist. If a man develops his character, people submit to him of
their own accord. If reason triumphs, the passions withdraw of themselves. To
be circumspect and not to forget one's armour is the right way to security.
Nine in the third place means:
To be powerful in the cheekbones
Brings misfortune.
The superior man is firmly resolved.
He walks alone and is caught in the rain.
He is bespattered,
And people murmur against him.
No blame.
Here we have a man in an ambiguous situation. While all others are engaged in
a resolute fight against all that is inferior, he alone has a certain relationship
with an inferior man. If he were to show strength outwardly and turn against
this man before the time is ripe, he would only endanger the entire situation,
because the inferior man would too quickly have recourse to countermeasures.
The task of the superior man becomes extremely difficult here. He must be firmly
resolved within himself and, while maintaining association with the inferior
man, avoid any participation in his evilness. He will of course be misjudged.
It will be thought that he belong to the party of the inferior man. He will
be lonely because no one will understand him. His relations with the inferior
man will sully him in the eyes of the multitude, and they will turn against
him, grumbling. But he can endure this lack of appreciation and makes no mistake,
because he remains true to himself.
Nine in the fourth place means:
There is no skin on his thighs,
And walking comes hard.
If a man were to let himself be led like a sheep,
Remorse would disappear.
But if these words are heard
They will not be believed.
Here a man is suffering from inner restlessness and cannot abide in his place.
He would like to push forward under any circumstances, but encounters insuperable
obstacles. Thus his situation entails an inner conflict. This is due to the
obstinacy with which he seeks to enforce his will. If he would desist from this
obstinacy, everything would go well. But this advice, like so much other good
counsel, will be ignored. For obstinacy makes a man unable to hear, for all
that he has ears.
Nine in the fifth place means:
In dealing with weeds,
Firm resolution is necessary.
Walking in the middle
Remains free of blame.
Weeds always grow back again and are difficult to exterminate. So too the struggle
against an inferior man in a high position demands firm resolution. One has
certain relations with him, hence there is danger that one may give up the struggle
as hopeless. But this must not be. One must go on resolutely and not allow himself
to be deflected from him course. Only in this way does one remain free of blame.
Six at the top means:
No cry.
In the end misfortune comes.
Victory seems to have been achieved. There remains merely a remnant of the evil
resolutely to be eradicated as the time demands. Everything looks easy. Just
there, however, lies the danger. If we're not on guard, evil will succeed in
escaping by means of concealment, and when it has eluded us new misfortunes
will develop from the remaining seeds, for evil does not die easily. So too
in dealing with the evil in one's own character, one must go to work with thoroughness.
If out of carelessness anything were to be overlooked, new evil would arise
from it.