Hexagram 4
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By: James Byrd
I.The Oracle
A. Hexagram four is Meng or Enveloping. Additional interpretations include Discovering, Young Shoot or Youthful Folly. Hexagram 4's lower trigram is Kan: gorge or water. And its upper trigram is Gen: bound or mountain.
B. The Judgment
1. Youthful Folly has success. It is not I who seeks the young fool;The young fool seeks me. At the first oracle, I inform him.
2. If he asks two or three times, it is importunity.
If he importunes, I give him no information. Perseverance furthers.
C. The Image
1. A spring wells up at the foot of the mountain:a) The image of Youth. The superior man fosters his character,
b) By thoroughness in all that he does.
II. My interpretation
A. "Youthful Folly"
More.....Soon!
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Karcher, S. and Ritesema, R. (1995). I Ching: The Classic Chinese Oracle of Change [The First Complete Translation with Concordance]
Legge, James (2012). The I Ching: The Book of Changes (Sacred Books of China: The Book of Changes)
Reifler, S. (1974) I Ching: The World's Oldest and Most Revered System of Fortune Telling
Van Over, R. (1971), I Ching
Wilhelm, R., and Baynes. C.F. (1967). The I Ching, or, Book of Changes (Bollingen Series XIX)
Wilhelm, Hellmut and Richard Wilhelm (1995). Understanding the I Ching
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