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Blog post: Hexagram 56 in trigrams

hilary

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Hexagram 56 in trigrams

56-fire-150x150.jpg
Fire on the mountain


The trigrams of Hexagram 56 show inner mountain and outer fire. The picture, for me, suggests the nomads’ campfire. It has limited fuel and a limited duration, and the travellers will need to resolve any disputes before the ashes are cool, so they can move on unencumbered in the morning.

A more traditional view is to see the fire itself as the ‘traveller’ – moving rapidly across the slopes, burning through the vegetation. Either way, we can see the trigram qualities embodied in the noble one:

‘Above the mountain is fire: Travelling.
A noble one is clear and thoughtful in administering punishments, and doesn’t draw out legal proceedings.’

He has the fire’s clarity, combined with the mountain’s stability, and its quality of drawing lines and defining endings.

In a way, this revisits the two contrasting ideas of the traveller from the Oracle: someone who is constant to their own standards, but must respect the limits of their situation. (Constancy, good fortune – but creating only small success.) The limits on available time and resources mean we can’t draw out the enquiry indefinitely: they call for clarity.

A trigram pattern in the Sequence


The Sequence of hexagrams is full of fascinating patterns. Here’s one of them: the arrangement of the 5 hexagram pairs that centres on 53 and 54, Gradual Development and the Marrying Maiden:

The pairs of hexagrams from 49/50 to 57/58, with their component trigrams: li + dui/xun, gen/zhen, gen/zhen + dui/xun, li+gen/zhen, dui/xun


(I’ve drawn the hexagrams rotated through 90 degrees so you can easily see both hexagrams of each pair, reading right-to-left as well as left-to-right.)

At the centre of this group of 10 are the ‘marriage’ hexagrams, joining the asymmetrical trigrams gen/zhen and dui/xun. (They’re about marriage in general, but also refer specifically to the marital alliance of Zhou and Shang, in 54.5.)

To either side of the centre, you can see the hexagrams made by doubling each of these trigrams: 51/52 for thunder and mountain, 57/58 for wind and lake.

And then there are two pairs that deal with crucial moments in the Zhou conquest story: the revolution itself and the sacred vessels in 49/50, and the crux point at the garrison of Feng, in Hexagram 55. Each of these pairs combines one of the asymmetrical trigrams with li, fire.

So… you can think of this group of hexagrams as being ‘about’ the central themes of gen/zhen and dui/xun: upheaval and stability, integration and exchange. All of those come together in the images of marriage – and especially the vital Zhou/Shang marriage – at the centre.

In that case, 49/50 and 55/56 are where you add li to those themes. Li is not just fire: it’s also light, vision and insight. I’d suggest it’s associated with stars and astronomy, and how the Zhou people gained clarity about the right time to act from their observations of the heavens.

Adding li can mean adding the patterns of stars, the eyes to see them and insight to understand. You can see as much in the Image of Hexagram 49 –

‘In the centre of the lake there is fire. Radical Change.
A noble one calculates the heavenly signs and clarifies the seasons.’

– and all the celestial observations in the lines of Hexagram 55.

In Abundance, starlight and vision join with action, emotion and upheaval (think of Hexagram 51) and Wu leads out his armies to conquer Shang. But what about poor old King Hai, whose travels through Yi weren’t exactly noted for his clear vision or sense of timing?

Perhaps it will help to think of this as adding fire to the separation – not-grasping, not-seeing – of Hexagram 52, doubled mountain:

‘Stilling your back,
Not grasping your self.
Moving in your rooms,
Not seeing your people.
Not a mistake.’

This seems reminiscent of Hai, who didn’t ‘see’ people, or get much of a grip on himself. Add fire, and his rooms (lodge and nest) are set ablaze!

If we tell the hexagram’s story with trigrams, then this fire looks less like clarity, and more like passion. Still, perhaps we could say that Hai’s obduracy, or the rock-solid laws of the Yi people, have eye-opening effects, and his fiery end casts light for the rest of us.

campfire under starlit sky
 

Trojina

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This blog is very hard to understand, it would take more brain power than is available, maybe when I'm recharged

(I’ve drawn the hexagrams rotated through 90 degrees so you can easily see both hexagrams of each pair, reading right-to-left as well as left-to-right.)

A small but quite radical idea because we really do see the pairedness of them we can almost miss if leafing through a Yi book
 

Liselle

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This blog is very hard to understand, it would take more brain power than is available
Trojina is correct. Like your Sequence book, I think it would reward li-ing through carefully with pencil and paper (or their electronic equivalents).

Speaking of that book, I think the "Lake/wind and thunder/mountain" section (pages 38-40) is good supplementary material to this post (or this to it).

🤩 to the part about "adding li to" (and what that says about 55 and 56).

Do you mind some questions?
  1. What made you think to put 53/54 at the center of anything?
  2. What made you go back to 49/50 and forwards to 57/58?
I have no clue about no. 1, but I'll pretend no. 2 is a quiz, and make a couple of guesses -
  1. was 'forwards to 57/58' noticeable because of doubling wind/lake from 53/54
  2. then did you go back to 49/50 in order to make a decade, and did you do that because decades are generally important in the Sequence
- ?

Also - I'm not sure I've ever gotten stopped at a section heading before. Saw "Fire on the mountain," in an article about 56, and thought huh? Isn't that 22?

...no, 22 is fire under mountain. The Images, though:

A noble one is clear and thoughtful in administering punishments, and does not draw out legal proceedings. (56)
A noble one brings light to the many standards, but does not venture to pass judgement. (22)

[Re-reading before posting...could the color-coding just as well be done cross-wise? I mean, I think there are parallels there, but what's parallel to what 🤕]

More guess-y "quiz answers":
  • they're similar in that they're both a little temporary? 22 is the surface image of 21 (but does it do that most effectively by illuminating from below/inside??); 56 by definition is moving along
  • difference: 56 administers punishments quickly for the reasons you gave, but 22 doesn't pass judgement because that's its Pair's job, 21?
  • also, is 56 carrying out what its Pair 55 decided on? (55: "A noble one decides legal proceedings and brings about punishment," vs. 56's "administering"?)
 

Liselle

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I can't make sense of my own questions without starting from scratch. 🤕 lol

(Am not even sure starting from scratch is helping... e.g. I'm not sure what I was thinking here, for one
22 is the surface image of 21 (but does it do that most effectively by illuminating from below/inside??)
)
 
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Trojina

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I can't make sense of my own questions without starting from scratch.

:rofl:sometimes it's quite relaxing to just think 'well I don't understand'. Actually I wonder how many people here do/did understand this blog post it is pretty challenging to the neurons. I do like the idea of turning the hexagrams sideways for sequence things though.
 

hilary

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maybe @hilary didn't see this or maybe she's too busy ?
Thank you for the @ . You're right, I didn't see this. Auto-forum-posted blog posts do not automatically subscribe me to the thread: I have to remember to visit forum after a while, find thread and click 'watch'. That's exactly as reliable as you'd expect it to be.

What made you think to put 53/54 at the center of anything?
They always struck me as a big occasion, one way and another. They're 'The Marriages', with some beautiful imagery and also that reference to the Zhou/Shang marriage that makes everything else possible. And structurally they're one of the 'Entangled Pairs' - both complementary and inverse. So this is the kind of place that seems as though it ought to be the centre of something.
then did you go back to 49/50 in order to make a decade, and did you do that because decades are generally important in the Sequence
Exactly that. It becomes a habit to look at a potential centre and start drawing rings round it, as it were, to see if any patterns show up.
A noble one is clear and thoughtful in administering punishments, and does not draw out legal proceedings. (56)
A noble one brings light to the many standards, but does not venture to pass judgement. (22)

[Re-reading before posting...could the color-coding just as well be done cross-wise? I mean, I think there are parallels there, but what's parallel to what 🤕]
I like your colour-coding as is, though I see what you mean.
More guess-y "quiz answers":
  • they're similar in that they're both a little temporary? 22 is the surface image of 21 (but does it do that most effectively by illuminating from below/inside??); 56 by definition is moving along
  • difference: 56 administers punishments quickly for the reasons you gave, but 22 doesn't pass judgement because that's its Pair's job, 21?
  • also, is 56 carrying out what its Pair 55 decided on? (55: "A noble one decides legal proceedings and brings about punishment," vs. 56's "administering"?)
Your guesses are at least as good as mine - for some reason I find it very hard to wrap my head round exactly what happens to meanings when trigrams swap places.

Another guess for the collection:
  • if light is on the inside, it brings light to standards, ie to theory, to general principles. If it's on the outside, it illuminates what's actually done in real life.
 

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