Hexagram 57: Xun -

The Gentle
Fine Art
John Constable — Cloud Study, Hampstead, Tree at Right

John Constable — Cloud Study, Hampstead, Tree at Right

John Constable (1821)

Constable made dozens of cloud studies in Hampstead Heath to understand atmospheric phenomena scientifically. This oil sketch depicts wind's invisible movement shaping clouds through gradual, continuous pressure. The Gentle (Sun) represents subtle penetration—air currents slowly forming and reforming vapors without force.

Practical Integration

Clouds shift and reform across John Constable's Hampstead sky. The English painter made this oil sketch in 1821, part of a systematic study of atmospheric phenomena—dozens of cloud studies documenting how invisible air currents shape visible vapor. Wind moves through the composition without appearing in it, reshaping cumulus masses through continuous, patient pressure. This captures what Zhou Dynasty diviners called Xun (巽), the doubled Wind trigram—gentle penetration. Wind above, wind below: subtle force working through the smallest openings. The ancient character 巽 shows a person kneeling in submission, suggesting influence through yielding rather than assertion. Where hexagram 51's doubled Thunder shocks with sudden power, Xun works gradually, the way Constable's wind sculpts clouds or air seeps through cracks stone cannot stop. Ancient practitioners saw this configuration when circumstances required tact, when transformation demanded patience, when forceful action would shatter what gentle persistence might shape. Constable made dozens of cloud studies in Hampstead Heath to understand atmospheric phenomena scientifically. This oil sketch depicts wind's invisible movement shaping clouds through gradual, continuous pressure. The Gentle (Sun) represents subtle penetration—air currents slowly forming and reforming vapors without force. The Judgment speaks to Constable's scientific method: \"Small success. It furthers one to have somewhere to go. It furthers one to see the great man.\" The painter returned to Hampstead Heath repeatedly, studying the same phenomena from different angles. Zhou court diviners associated Xun with wood and growth—not the thunder-crack of sprouting, but the slow work of roots finding pathways through soil. Wind bends trees without breaking them, enters buildings through gaps no eye can see. The Image Text offers unexpected counsel: \"Winds following one upon the other: the image of the Gently Penetrating. Thus the superior one spreads commands abroad and carries out undertakings.\" Constable's clouds demonstrate this principle—each gust builds on the previous one, cumulative pressure creating forms that individual gusts could never shape. In the I-Ching sequence, Xun follows hexagram 56's Wanderer: after displacement comes the work of gradually re-establishing influence, seeping back into spaces through persistent, humble attention to small openings.

References & Citations

  1. Cloud Study, Hampstead, Tree at Right — John Constable-1821. Constable made dozens of cloud studies in Hampstead Heath to understand atmospheric phenomena scientifically. This oil sketch depicts wind's invisible movement shaping clouds through gradual, continuous pressure. The Gentle (Sun) represents subtle penetration—air currents slowly forming and reforming vapors without force.

The Judgment

巽。小亨,利有攸往,利见大人。小、持续、精确行动在力量失败的地方穿透。

xùnadaptation
xiǎoin a
hēngfulfillment
worth(while)
yǒuto have
yōusomewhere
wǎngto go
worthwhile
jiànto see
the mature
rénhuman being

The Image

随风,巽;君子以申命行事。重复的安静信号成为政策。

suísucce(ssive
fēngwinds
xùnadapt(ing)
jūnthe noble
young one
accordingly
shēnsets forth
mìngthe higher purpose
xíngin
shìthe work

The Lines (爻辭)

Line 1進退利武人之貞

jìnadvance
退tuìand retreat
meriting
the military
rénone
zhī's
zhēnpersistence

Line 2巽在床下用史巫紛若吉無咎

xùnencroach(ment)
zàioccur
chuángthe bed
xiàunder
yòngemploy
shǐscribes
and diviners
fēnan assortment
ruòof such
promising
no
jiùblame(worthy)

Line 3頻巽吝

pínfrequent
xùnadaptation
lìnembarrass(ment)

Line 4悔亡田獲三品

huǐregret(s)
wángpass
tiánin the field
huòtake
sānthree
pǐnkind

Line 5貞吉悔亡無不利無初有終先庚三日後庚三日吉

zhēnpersistence
is promising
huǐregret(s)
wángpass
without
doubt
worthwhile
without
chūthe beginning
yǒuthere is
zhōngan conclusion
xiānbefore
gēngreform
sānthree
days
hòuafter
gēngreform
sānthree
days
promising

Line 6巽在床下喪其資斧貞凶

xùnencroach(ment)
zàioccur
chuángthe bed
xiàunder
sànglosing
one's own
resources
and an ax
zhēnpersistence
xiōngis disappointing

Historical Context

Oracle Bone Script

风(☴)加倍——柔和、穿透的影响通过持续微妙行动进入各处。

Period

周朝

Traditional Use

威廉:'巽。小亨,利有攸往,利见大人。'风通过持续柔和影响穿透,不是突然力量。小持续行动实现暴力无法实现的。

Character Analysis

汉字巽(xùn)意味着风、柔和进入、穿透。甲骨文形式显示两人跪着顺从——使进入成为可能的屈服。电话盗打:向网络协议'顺从'的音调,屈服于系统期望同时利用它们。

Configuration

Lower Trigram

Upper Trigram

Binary

011011

Energy State

风加倍——持续柔和穿透。通过持续精确而不是力量进入系统的微妙影响。

Trigram Symbolism

☴ 风(上)——巽,穿透,微妙影响 ☴ 风(下)——巽,坚持,持续行动 君子通过柔和持续信号传播命令。

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