The 64 chapters > 54 Kuei Mei: The Marrying Maiden |
54 Kuei Mei: The Marrying Maiden
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The 64 Chapters-54 54 Kuei Mei: The Marrying Maiden |
Above we have Cheng, the eldest son, and below, Tui, the youngest daughter. The man leads and the girl follows him in gladness. The picture is that of the entrance of the girl into her husband's house. In all, there are four hexagrams depicting the relationship between husband and wife. Hsien, INFLUENCE, (31), describes the attraction that a young couple have for each other; Heng, DURATION (32), portrays the permanent relationships of marriage; Chien, DEVELOPMENT (53), reflects the protracted, ceremonious procedures attending THE MARRYING MAIDEN, shows a young girl under the guidance of an older man who marries her.
The judgement
THE MARRYING MAIDEN.
Undertakings bring misfortune.
Nothing that would further.
A girl who's taken into the family, but not as the chief wife, must behave with
special caution and reserve. She must not take it on herself to supplant the
mistress of the house, for that would mean disorder and lead to untenable relationships.
The same is true of all voluntary relationships between human beings. While
legally regulated relationships based on personal inclination depend in the
long run entirely on tactful reserve.
Affection as the essential principle of relatedness is of the greatest importance
in all relationships in the world. For the union of heaven and earth is the
origin of the whole of nature. Among human beings likewise, spontaneous affection
is the all-inclusive principle of union.
The image
Thunder over the lake:
The image of THE MARRYING MAIDEN.
Thus the superior man
Understands the transitory
In the light of the eternity of the end.
Thunder stirs the water of the lake, which follows it in shimmering waves. This
symbolises the girl who follows the man of her choice. But every relationship
between individuals bears within it the danger that wrong turns may be taken,
leading to endless misunderstandings and disagreements. Therefore it is necessary
constantly to remain mindful of the end. If we permit ourselves to drift along,
we come together and are parted again as the day may determine. If on the other
hand a man fixes his mind on an end that endures, he will succeed in avoiding
the reefs that confront the closer relationships of people.
The lines
Nine at the beginning [yang at bottom] means:
The marrying maiden as a concubine.
A lame man who's able to tread.
Undertakings bring good fortune.
The princess of ancient China maintained a fixed order of rank among the court
ladies, who were subordinated to the queen as are younger sisters to the eldest.
Frequently they came from the family of the queen, who herself led them to her
husband.
The meaning is that a girl entering a family with the consent of the wife will
not rank outwardly as the equal of the latter but will withdraw modestly into
the background. However, if she understands how to fit herself into the pattern
of things, her position will be entirely satisfactory, and she will feel sheltered
in the love of the husband to whom she bears children.
The same meaning is brought out in the relationships between officials. A man
may enjoy the personal friendship of a prince and be taken into his confidence.
Outwardly this man must keep tactfully in the background behind the official
ministers of state, but, although he is hampered by this status, as if he were
lame, he can nevertheless accomplish something through the kindliness of his
nature.
Nine in the second place means:
A one-eyed man who's able to see.
The perseverance of a solitary man furthers.
Here the situation is that of a girl married to a man who has disappointed her.
Man and wife ought to work together like a pair of eyes. Here the girl is left
behind in loneliness; the man of her choice either has become unfaithful or
has died. But she does not lose the inner light of loyalty. Though the other
eye is gone, she maintains her loyalty even in loneliness.
Six in the third place means:
The marrying maiden as a slave.
She marries as a concubine.
A girl who's in a lowly position and finds no husband may, in some circumstances,
still win shelter as a concubine.
This pictures the situation of a person who longs too much for joys that cannot
be obtained in the usual way. He enters on a situation not altogether compatible
with self-esteem. Neither judgement nor warning is added to this line; it merely
lays bare the actual situation, so that everyone may draw a lesson from it.
Nine in the fourth place means:
The marrying maiden draws out the allotted time.
A late marriage comes in due course.
The girl is virtuous. She does not wish to throw herself away, and allows the
customary time for marriage to slip by. However, there is no harm in this; she
is rewarded for her purity and, even though belatedly, finds the husband intended
for her.
Six in the fifth place means:
The sovereign I gave his daughter in marriage.
The embroidered garments of the princess
Were not as gorgeous
As those of the serving maid.
The moon that is nearly full
Brings good fortune.
The sovereign I is Tang the Completer. This ruler decreed that the imperial
princesses should be subordinated to their husbands in the same manner as other
women (cf. Hexagram 11, six in the fifth place). The emperor does not wait for
a suitor to woo his daughter but gives her in marriage when he sees fit. Therefore
it is in accord with custom for the girl's family to take the initiative here.
We see here a girl of aristocratic birth who marries a man of modest circumstances
and understands how to adapt herself with grace to the new situation. She is
free of all vanity of outer adornment, and forgetting her rank in her marriage,
takes a place below that of her husband, just as the moon, before it is quite
full, does not directly face the sun.
Six at the top means:
The woman holds the basket, but there are no fruits in it.
The man stabs the sheep, but no blood flows.
Nothing that acts to further.
At the sacrifice to the ancestors, the woman had to present harvest offerings
in a basket, while the man slaughtered the sacrificial animal with his own hand.
Here the ritual is only superficially fulfilled; the woman takes an empty basket
and the man stabs a sheep slaughtered beforehand-solely to preserve the forms.
This impious, irreverent attitude bodes no good for a marriage.