Hexagram 23: Bo -

Splitting Apart
Fine Art
William Blake — Nebuchadnezzar

William Blake — Nebuchadnezzar

William Blake (1795)

Blake illustrated the Biblical story of King Nebuchadnezzar, who was driven from his throne and lived as a beast in the wilderness as punishment for pride. The color print shows the fallen king on all fours with wild hair and long fingernails, crawling on the ground. Blake's depiction portrays a figure experiencing psychological and spiritual disintegration.

Practical Integration

King Nebuchadnezzar crawls on all fours through wilderness, his body reduced to animal form. William Blake illustrated this biblical story in 1795, showing the Babylonian monarch driven from his throne as punishment for pride. Wild hair streams down his back, fingernails have grown into claws, and his eyes stare forward with neither recognition nor comprehension. The king who built gardens and conquered nations now eats grass like cattle, his human identity disintegrated. This is Bō (剝), Splitting Apart—the character showing a knife cutting away from whole cloth. The hexagram shows Mountain (Gèn) above Earth (Kūn): stillness perched precariously over the receptive. Five yin lines rise from below, with only one yang line remaining at the top—an image of systematic erosion, layer after layer stripped away until almost nothing holds. In Zhou Dynasty divination, this configuration appeared when collapse had progressed too far for repair, when the wise withdrew rather than resist the inevitable. Blake illustrated the Biblical story of King Nebuchadnezzar, who was driven from his throne and lived as a beast in the wilderness as punishment for pride. The color print shows the fallen king on all fours with wild hair and long fingernails, crawling on the ground. Blake's depiction portrays a figure experiencing psychological and spiritual disintegration. The Judgment text offers stark counsel: \"Splitting Apart. It does not further one to go anywhere.\" When disintegration reaches this stage, action accelerates decay. Ancient practitioners understood this as the time to yield, to accept diminishment, to preserve what little remains rather than exhaust it fighting entropy. Blake depicts the moment when Nebuchadnezzar's reason splits from his body—no action he might take could prevent what divine judgment set in motion. The text does not promise recovery; it counsels stillness. The Image Text observes: \"The mountain rests on the earth: the image of Splitting Apart. Thus those above can ensure their position only by giving generously to those below.\" Even in decay, there are responses. When the foundation erodes, those who remain at the top survive only by distributing what they have, by releasing their grip on position. Blake painted this late in life, having witnessed both French and American revolutions—moments when old orders split apart beneath the pressure of accumulated grievances. In the I-Ching sequence, Splitting Apart follows Grace: when decoration can no longer hide structural failure, disintegration proceeds. The next hexagram is Return, the winter solstice point where decline finally reverses.

References & Citations

  1. Nebuchadnezzar — William Blake-1795. Blake illustrated the Biblical story of King Nebuchadnezzar, who was driven from his throne and lived as a beast in the wilderness as punishment for pride. The color print shows the fallen king on all fours with wild hair and long fingernails, crawling on the ground. Blake's depiction portrays a figure experiencing psychological and spiritual disintegration.

The Judgment

Splitting Apart. It does not further one to go anywhere. Submit to the time. The wise accept what cannot be prevented and manage the transition with care.

decompose
(it) (is) not (much)
worth(while)
yǒu(to
yōusomewhere
wǎngto go

The Image

The mountain rests on the earth: the image of Splitting Apart. Thus those above can ensure their position only by giving generously to those below.

shān(a
added
to
(the) earth
decomposing
shàng(a
accordingly
hòu(is
xià(a
ān(in
zhái(a

The Lines (爻辭)

Line 1剝床以足蔑貞凶

depriving
chuáng(the) bed
of (the use of)
(the
miè(to) dismiss
zhēnpersistence
xiōng(is) unfortunate

Line 2剝床以辨蔑貞凶

depriving
chuáng(the) bed
of (the use of)
biàn(the
miè(to) dismiss
zhēnpersistence
xiōng(is) unfortunate

Line 3剝之無咎

depriving
zhīitself
is not
jiùblame

Line 4剝床以膚凶

depriving
chuáng(the) bed
of (the use of)
(the
xiōngunfortunate

Line 5貫魚以宮人寵無不利

guàn(a) string(line)
of fish(es)
by (way
gōng(the) palace
rénoccupants'
chǒngsponsorship
without
doubt
worthwhile

Line 6碩果不食君子得輿小人剝廬

shuò(the) ripe
guǒfruit (realization
is not
shí(being) eaten
jūn(a
young one
gains
輿support
xiǎo(as
rénones
(are) deprived of
(their)(own) hovels

Historical Context

Oracle Bone Script

Mountain (☶) sits above, Earth (☷) sits below—mountain resting on earth, but the foundation is eroding.

Period

Zhou Dynasty

Traditional Use

The classical text describes dark lines mounting upward to overthrow the last light line through gradual disintegration. Linked to the ninth month (October-November), when yin power rises to supplant yang entirely.

Character Analysis

剝 (bō) - splitting apart, peeling away, flaying. The character depicts a knife and an ox—the systematic dismantling of what was once whole. Kowloon's demolition: not sudden catastrophe but methodical deconstruction, floor by floor, room by room, returning the mountain to earth.

Configuration

Lower Trigram

Earth

Upper Trigram

Mountain

Binary

000001

Energy State

Deterioration, inevitable decline. Five yin lines rising from below, one yang line at top barely holding. The mountain rests on earth that is eroding beneath it.

Trigram Symbolism

☶ Mountain (Upper) - Keeping Still, but undermined from below ☷ Earth (Lower) - The Receptive, reclaiming what was built upon it The mountain must rest on broad base or it topples. Kowloon: vertical mountain of density collapsing back to horizontal earth.

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