Hexagram 5: Xu -

Fine Art
Caspar David Friedrich — Wanderer above the Sea of Fog

Caspar David Friedrich — Wanderer above the Sea of Fog

Caspar David Friedrich (1818)

Friedrich's Romantic painting shows a figure standing above fog-shrouded peaks, waiting and contemplating. The wanderer cannot proceed through the obscured landscape and must pause for clarity to emerge.

Practical Integration

A lone figure stands on a rocky summit, back turned to us, surrounded by an ocean of fog. Caspar David Friedrich painted Wanderer above the Sea of Fog in 1818, positioning his subject at the edge where solid ground meets absolute obscurity. Every valley below, every path forward, every landmark that might guide movement—erased by cloud. The wanderer's walking stick suggests he arrived here through effort, climbed to this vantage point deliberately. Yet now all forward progress stops. Not from exhaustion or defeat, but because the landscape itself refuses passage. The figure stands still, dark coat and hair silhouetted against pale mist, waiting for conditions to change. This is Xū (需), which combines Water (☵) below and Heaven (☰) above. The character 需 suggests rain and need—something required that has not yet arrived. Clouds gather in heaven; moisture accumulates but rain holds back. Friedrich's wanderer inhabits this exact moment: strength and clarity exist above (he has reached the summit, the sky remains visible), while danger and the unknown pool below in the valley mist. The path exists beneath that fog, but forcing passage now means stumbling blind. Friedrich's Romantic painting shows a figure standing above fog-shrouded peaks, waiting and contemplating. The wanderer cannot proceed through the obscured landscape and must pause for clarity to emerge. The Judgment addresses the wanderer: \"Waiting. If you are sincere, you have light and success. Perseverance brings good fortune.\" The text promises that crossing the fog-ocean becomes possible—but timing separates tragedy from triumph. In Zhou Dynasty court divinations, this hexagram appeared when generals planned river crossings, when envoys awaited diplomatic responses, when farmers watched clouds for rain. Ancient diviners understood that Xū describes not passive helplessness but active readiness, positioning oneself where conditions can be recognized when they shift. What does one do while clouds gather? The Image Text offers practical advice: \"Clouds rise up to heaven: the image of waiting. Thus the superior man eats and drinks, is joyous and of good cheer.\" During enforced waiting, maintain strength. Friedrich's wanderer stands firm on his outcrop, not collapsed in anxious striving. He has positioned himself where he can see when the fog lifts. In the I-Ching's sequence, Xū follows Méng: after recognizing what you don't yet know, you must wait for the teacher, the conditions, the clarity that permits advance. Impatience here breeds the next hexagram—Conflict.

References & Citations

  1. Wanderer above the Sea of Fog — Caspar David Friedrich-1818. Friedrich's Romantic painting shows a figure standing above fog-shrouded peaks, waiting and contemplating. The wanderer cannot proceed through the obscured landscape and must pause for clarity to emerge.

The Judgment

Waiting. If you are sincere, you have light and success. Perseverance brings good fortune. It furthers one to cross the great water.

anticipation
yǒube
true
guāngexemplify
hēngfulfillment
zhēnpersistence
promising
worthwhile
shèto cross
the great
chuānstream

The Image

Clouds rise up to heaven: the image of Waiting. Thus the superior man eats and drinks, is joyous and of good cheer.

yúnthe clouds
shàngrise
into
tiānheaven
anticipation
jūnnoble
young one
accordingly
yǐndrinks
shídines
yànrelaxed
happy

The Lines (爻辭)

Line 1需于郊利用恆無咎

waiting
on
jiāothe outskirts
worthwhile
yònguseful
héngwhat endures
no
jiùblame

Line 2需于沙小有言終吉

waiting
on
shāthe sand
xiǎothe small
yǒuhave
yánthings to say
zhōngin the end
auspicious

Line 3需于泥致寇至

waiting
in
the mud
zhìinviting
kòuthieves
zhìto approach

Line 4需于血出自穴

waiting
in
xuèblood
chūemerge
from
xuéthat

Line 5需于酒食貞吉

waiting
amidst
jiǔwine
shífood
zhēnpersistence
promising

Line 6入于穴有不速之客三人來敬之終吉

entering
into
xuéa pit
yǒuwith
no
invitation
zhīextended to
visitors
sānthree
rénpeople
láiarrive
jìngto respect
zhīto them
zhōngwill end in
good fortune

Historical Context

Oracle Bone Script

Water (☵) above in the heavens as clouds, Heaven (☰) below as creative power. Nourishment comes from above, but in its own time.

Period

Zhou Dynasty

Traditional Use

Wilhelm describes rain providing nourishment to all beings. The clouds gather, but cannot be forced to release. We wait with inner certainty, not empty hoping.

Character Analysis

Strength within (Heaven), danger in front (Water). The strong person bides time in the face of danger—doesn't plunge forward, doesn't panic backward. Maintains position with clarity about the situation as it actually is.

Configuration

Lower Trigram

Heaven

Upper Trigram

Water

Binary

111010

Energy State

Creative strength below, danger above. Inner certainty facing outer hazard. Read bottom to top: solid yang force building beneath, water's uncertainty above.

Trigram Symbolism

☵ Water (Upper) - The Abysmal, danger, clouds gathering ☰ Heaven (Lower) - The Creative, strength, power accumulating Strength in the face of danger waits, doesn't waste itself.

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