Hexagram 63 · Legge 1899
Kî Žî
Judgment
Ki Zi intimates progress and success in small matters. There will be advantage in being firm and correct. There has been good fortune in the beginning; there may be disorder in the end.
Image
(The trigram representing) fire and that for water above it form Ki Zi. The superior man, in accordance with this, thinks of evil (that may come), and beforehand guards against it.
Lines
Line 1
The first line, undivided, (shows its subject as a driver) who drags back his wheel, (or as a fox) which has wet his tail. There will be no error.
Line 2
The second line, divided, (shows its subject as) a wife who has lost her (carriage-)screen. There is no occasion to go in pursuit of it. In seven days she will find it.
Line 3
The third line, undivided, (suggests the case of) Kao Zung, who attacked the Demon region, but was three years in subduing it. Small men should not be employed (in such enterprises).
Line 4
The fourth line, divided, shows its subject with rags provided against any leak (in his boat), and on his guard all day long.
Line 5
The fifth line, undivided, shows its subject (as) the neighbour in the east who slaughters an ox (for his sacrifice); but this is not equal to the (small) spring sacrifice of the neighbour in the west, whose sincerity receives the blessing.
Line 6
The topmost line, divided, shows its subject with (even) his head immersed. The position is perilous.
Source: James Legge, The Sacred Books of China: The Texts of Confucianism, Part II: The Yi King, second edition, Clarendon Press, 1899 · legge_1899:volume_1:google_books:page204
Public-domain source text for classical-text study and reflection. It does not provide personal outcome claims.
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