Hexagram 47: Kun -

Oppression
Fine Art
William Blake — The Great Red Dragon and the Woman Clothed with the Sun

William Blake — The Great Red Dragon and the Woman Clothed with the Sun

William Blake (1805)

Blake created this watercolor as part of a series illustrating the Book of Revelation. It depicts the seven-headed dragon from Revelation 12 towering over the pregnant woman clothed with the sun. The woman's helpless position beneath the overwhelming supernatural force relates to hexagram 47's theme of oppression or exhaustion.

Practical Integration

A seven-headed dragon towers over a woman clothed with the sun, its tails sweeping the stars. William Blake created this watercolor in 1805 as part of his Revelation series, depicting the apocalyptic vision from the Book of Revelation. The pregnant woman cowers beneath the beast's massive form, her radiant garments contrasting with the dragon's red scales. The image captures absolute vulnerability—celestial protection insufficient against overwhelming supernatural threat. Blake created this watercolor as part of a series illustrating the Book of Revelation. It depicts the seven-headed dragon from Revelation 12 towering over the pregnant woman clothed with the sun. The woman's helpless position beneath the overwhelming supernatural force relates to hexagram 47's theme of oppression or exhaustion. This is Kùn (困), Oppression or Exhaustion, the hexagram describing the condition of being hemmed in, depleted, unable to advance. The character shows a tree enclosed within boundaries—vital energy constrained by circumstance. The trigram structure places Lake (Duì) above Water (Kǎn): water above water, the lake draining into the abyss below, resources exhausted. Blake's composition emphasizes this enclosure—the woman trapped beneath the dragon's looming presence, her position offering no escape, her pregnancy making flight impossible. The Judgment text states: \"Oppression. Success. Perseverance. The great man brings about good fortune. No blame. When one has something to say, it is not believed.\" The text offers paradoxical counsel—success and good fortune remain possible even in oppression, but words lose their power, explanations fail to convince. Blake's woman cannot argue with the beast above her; speech offers no defense against such force. In Zhou Dynasty divination, this hexagram appeared when drought exhausted wells, when sieges drained cities, when resources ran short despite best efforts. The configuration describes external constraint rather than internal failure—being trapped by circumstance, not character. The Image Text observes: \"There is no water in the lake: the image of Exhaustion. Thus the superior person stakes life on following will.\" The lake emptied, the well run dry—this is the hexagram's central image. What does one do when external resources fail? The text counsels reliance on internal conviction when external support vanishes. Blake's woman, despite her peril, remains clothed in the sun, her essential radiance maintained even under the dragon's shadow. In the I-Ching sequence, Kùn follows Shēng (pushing upward): after the climb comes the moment of exhaustion at the summit, or the crisis when upward progress meets overwhelming resistance. The woman's oppression is positional—caught between earth and beast with nowhere to retreat, the stars themselves falling around her, yet the text promises that perseverance and great character can find success even here.

References & Citations

  1. The Great Red Dragon and the Woman Clothed with the Sun — William Blake-1805. Blake created this watercolor as part of a series illustrating the Book of Revelation. It depicts the seven-headed dragon from Revelation 12 towering over the pregnant woman clothed with the sun. The woman's helpless position beneath the overwhelming supernatural force relates to hexagram 47's theme of oppression or exhaustion.

The Judgment

Oppression. Success. Perseverance. The great man brings about good fortune. No blame. When one has something to say, it is not believed.

kùnexhaustion
hēngfulfillment
zhēnand
to
rénhuman being
promise
no
jiùblame
yǒubut to have
yánthis
is
xìnto believe

The Image

There is no water in the lake: The image of Exhaustion. Thus the superior man stakes his life on following his will.

the lake
without
shuǐwater
kùnexhaustion
jūnnoble
young one
accordingly
zhìinvokes
mìnga higher order
suìto follow through
zhìthe aim

The Lines (爻辭)

Line 1臀困于株木入于幽谷三歲不覿

túnwith rump
kùnbeset
by
zhūcane
of wood
entering
into
yōuthe gloomy
valley
sānfor three
suìyears
not
覿seen face to face

Line 2困于酒食朱紱方來利用享祀征凶

kùnbeset
amidst
jiǔwine
shíand food
zhūthe scarlet
sashed nobles
fāngsuddenly
láiarrive
worthwhile
yòngand useful
xiǎngto offer up
the sacrifice + to give up this spirit
zhēnginitiative
xiōngbut

Line 3困于石據于蒺藜入于其宮不見其妻凶

kùnbeset
by
shístone
seize
upon
thorns
brambles
entering
into
his
gōnghouse
but not
jiànseeing
his
wife
xiōngunfortunate

Line 4來徐徐困于金車吝有終

láiapproaching
slowly
so slowly
kùnbeset
in
jīnmetal
chēchariot
lìnbut the
yǒuhas
zhōngan end

Line 5劓刖困于赤紱乃徐有說利用祭祀

nose cut off
yuèand feet cut off
kùnbeset
by
chìthe blush
sashed ministers
nǎiand only then
slowly
yǒugetting
shuōrelief
worthwhile
yòngand useful
to give
and a

Line 6困于葛藟于臲卼曰動悔有悔征吉

kùnbeset
by
creeping
lěiand vines
proceeding
nièunsteadiliness
and awkwardly(ness)
yuēand
dòngthat action
huǐis
yǒuto have
huǐthe regret(s)
zhēngand expedite
is promising

Historical Context

Oracle Bone Script

Lake (☱) above, Water (☵) below—joy exhausted, depth unreachable. The lake has no outlet; the water cannot rise.

Period

Zhou Dynasty

Traditional Use

困 (Oppression/Exhaustion) describes circumstances where every action fails. The lake sits over water but cannot access it—resources exist but remain blocked. Wilhelm: 'The superior man stakes his life on following his will.'

Character Analysis

困 (kùn) shows a tree (木) enclosed by walls (囗)—growth constrained, potential trapped. The character itself depicts oppression: life force present but unable to expand. Related to exhaustion, poverty, and the particular suffering of capability denied expression.

Configuration

Lower Trigram

Water

Upper Trigram

Lake

Binary

010110

Energy State

Water below could nourish, but the lake above is sealed. Joy (Lake) sits atop danger (Water) with no channel between. Energy exists but cannot circulate—the condition of being resourced yet blocked.

Trigram Symbolism

☱ Lake (Upper) — Joy, openness, the youngest daughter ☵ Water (Lower) — Danger, depth, the middle son Joy over danger: the smile maintained above the abyss. What should flow upward to replenish the lake instead drains away unseen.

For the classical Wilhelm translation and line-by-line commentary, see Wilhelm Translation.