M^ eng / Youthful Folly
above: K^ en Keeping Still, Mountain
below: K'an The Abysmal, Water
Mang (indicates that in the case which it presupposes) there
will be progress and success. I do not (go and) seek the
youthful and inexperienced, but he comes and seeks me. When
he shows (the sincerity that marks) the first recourse to
divination, I instruct him. If he apply a second and third
time, that is troublesome; and I do not instruct the
troublesome. There will be advantage in being firm and correct.
Overall Meaning
Youthful inexperience, the symbol of obscurity
As Kun showws us plants struggling from beneath the surface, Mang suggests to us the small and undeveloped appearance which they then present; and hence it came to be the symbol of youthful inexperience and ignorance. The object of the hexagram is to show how such a condition should be dealt with by the parent and ruler, whose authority and duty are represented by the second and sixth, the two undivided lines. All between the first and last sentences of the Thwan must be taken as an oracular response received by the party on the subject of enlightening the youthful ignorant. This accounts for its being more than usually enigmatical, and for its being partly rhythmical. See Appendix I.