Hexagram 7: Shi -

The Army
Fine Art
Jacques-Louis David — Napoleon Crossing the Alps

Jacques-Louis David — Napoleon Crossing the Alps

Jacques-Louis David (1801)

David painted Napoleon on horseback leading his army across the Alps in 1800. The Neoclassical portrait shows the commander directing his troops, illustrating organized military force under centralized leadership.

Practical Integration

Jacques-Louis David painted Napoleon on a rearing stallion, crossing the Alps in May 1801. The Neoclassical portrait shows the First Consul wrapped in a gold-trimmed cloak that billows dramatically behind him, his right arm extended to point forward toward the mountain passes. The horse's front hooves lift off rocky ground; Napoleon sits firmly in the saddle, his face calm despite the apparent motion. Behind him, barely visible in storm clouds, soldiers and artillery struggle upward through the snow. This is not documentary painting but propaganda—Napoleon actually crossed the Alps on a mule, in clear weather, with his army already ahead of him. David painted the ideal of command: one man directing collective force through sheer presence and will. This is Shī (師), which combines Water (☵) above and Earth (☷) below. The character 師 originally depicted a military division under organized command, the multitude given direction by leadership. Water stored within earth: hidden reserves, potential force held under control until the moment of deployment. David's composition embodies this structure—the general visible and elevated, the troops implied but subordinate, moving as one body toward a single objective. David painted Napoleon on horseback leading his army across the Alps in 1800. The Neoclassical portrait shows the commander directing his troops, illustrating organized military force under centralized leadership. The Judgment declares: \"The army needs perseverance and a strong man. Good fortune without blame.\" David painted the strong man, but the historical Napoleon understood the deeper requirement—that armies move through persistence rather than momentary heroism, that discipline sustains force more reliably than charisma. Zhou Dynasty military texts associated with this hexagram emphasized supply lines, morale, the capacity to maintain order during the chaos of campaign. The Image Text reveals the foundation of legitimate military power: \"In the middle of the earth is water: the image of the army. Thus the superior man increases his masses by generosity toward the people.\" Water nourishes earth; command sustains soldiers through care rather than coercion. Napoleon knew this principle—he reformed military logistics, promoted on merit, shared rations with his troops. In the I-Ching's sequence, Shī follows Sòng: when conflict cannot be resolved through mediation, organized collective action becomes necessary. David's painting shows conflict transformed into coordinated movement, individual wills subordinated to common purpose under leadership that earns rather than demands obedience.

References & Citations

  1. Napoleon Crossing the Alps — Jacques-Louis David-1801. David painted Napoleon on horseback leading his army across the Alps in 1800. The Neoclassical portrait shows the commander directing his troops, illustrating organized military force under centralized leadership.

The Judgment

The Army needs perseverance and a strong man. Good fortune without blame. Ender perseveres through exhaustion. He's strong enough to bear the weight. His army follows him into the impossible and wins because the leadership is genuine.

shīthe militia
zhēnpersistence
zhàngthe mature
rénone's
good fortune
no
jiùblame

The Image

In the middle of the earth is water: the image of the Army. Thus the superior man increases his masses by generosity toward the people. Ender treats his soldiers with respect. He promotes on merit. He shares the danger. This creates loyalty that force never could.

the earth
zhōngin
yǒuis
shuǐwater
shīthe militia
jūnnoble
young one
accordingly
róngtolerant
mínhumanity
chùand cares for
zhòngthe multitude

The Lines (爻辭)

Line 1師出以律否臧凶

shīthe militia
chūsets out
by
code
if not
zāngright
xiōngunfortunate

Line 2在師中吉無咎王三錫命

zàiat
shīthe militia
zhōngthe center
promising
nothing
jiùblame
wángthe sovereign
sānthree times
grants
mìngdecrees

Line 3師或輿尸凶

shīthe militia
huòmay
輿to transport
shīdead bodies
xiōngunfortunate

Line 4師左次無咎

shīthe militia's
zuǒin a fallback
encampment
no
jiùblame

Line 5田有禽利執言無咎長子帥師弟子輿尸貞凶

tiánthe fields
yǒuholds
qíngame
worthwhile
zhíto control
yánthe talking
no
jiùblame
zhǎngthe elder
son
shuàicaptains
shīthe militia
the younger
son
輿would only transport
shīthe corpses
zhēnpersistence
xiōngunfortunate

Line 6大君有命開國承家小人勿用

the great
jūnnoble
yǒuassumes
mìngfull command
kāiestablish
guóthe domains
chéngand recognizes
jiāthe clans
xiǎothe lesser
rénpeople
are not at all
yònguseful

Historical Context

Oracle Bone Script

Earth (☷) above, representing the receptive masses. Water (☵) below, representing hidden danger and stored power.

Period

Zhou Dynasty

Traditional Use

Wilhelm describes military strength stored invisibly in the people, like groundwater in earth. Danger inside (capacity for violence), obedience outside (discipline).

Character Analysis

The strong nine in the second place is the commander, not the ruler. The efficient general who maintains authority through capability, not position. One strong line organizing five yielding lines into effective force.

Configuration

Lower Trigram

Water

Upper Trigram

Earth

Binary

010000

Energy State

Receptive obedience above, dangerous power below. Organized mass. Read bottom to top: one yang line (leader) holding yang-water's danger, yin lines (followers) above in earth's formation.

Trigram Symbolism

☷ Earth (Upper) - The Receptive, the masses, discipline ☵ Water (Lower) - The Abysmal, danger, hidden strength Power stored invisibly, mobilized when needed.

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