大有
dà yǒu

14. Possession in Great Measure

Above
The Clinging, Flame
Below
qián
The Creative, Heaven

The fire in heav­en above shines far, and all things stand out in the light and be­come man­i­fest. The weak fifth line oc­cu­pies the place of honor, and all the strong lines are in ac­cord with it. All things come to the man who is mod­est and kind in a high po­si­tion.

The Judgement

Possession in great measure.
Supreme success.

The two tri­grams in­di­cate that strength and clar­i­ty unite. Pos­ses­sion in great mea­sure is de­ter­mined by fate and ac­cords with the time. How is it pos­si­ble that the weak line has power to hold the strong lines fast and to pos­sess them? It is done by virtue of un­selfish mod­esty. The time is fa­vor­able—a time of strength with­in, clar­i­ty and cul­ture with­out. Power is ex­press­ing it­self in a grace­ful and con­trolled way. This brings supreme suc­cess and wealth.

The Image

Fire in heaven above:
The image of possession in great measure.
Thus the superior man curbs evil and furthers good,
And thereby obeys the benevolent will of heaven.

The sun in heav­en above, shed­ding light over every­thing on earth, is the image of pos­ses­sion on a grand scale. But a pos­ses­sion of this sort must be ad­min­is­tered prop­er­ly. The sun brings both evil and good into the light of day. Man must com­bat and curb the evil, and must favor and pro­mote the good. Only in this way does he ful­fill the benev­o­lent will of God, who de­sires only good and not evil.

The Lines

Nine at the beginning means:
No relationship with what is harmful;
There is no blame in this.
If one remains conscious of difficulty,
One remains without blame

Great pos­ses­sion that is still in its be­gin­nings and that has not yet been chal­lenged brings no blame, since there has been no op­por­tu­ni­ty to make mis­takes. Yet there are many dif­fi­cul­ties to be over­come. It is only by re­main­ing con­scious of these dif­fi­cul­ties that one can keep in­ward­ly free of pos­si­ble ar­ro­gance and waste­ful­ness, and thus in prin­ci­ple over­come all cause for blame.

Nine in the second place means:
A big wagon for loading.
One may undertake something.
No blame.

Great pos­ses­sion con­sists not only in the quan­ti­ty of goods at one’s dis­pos­al, but, first and fore­most, in their mo­bil­i­ty and util­i­ty, for then they can be used in un­der­tak­ings, and we re­main free of em­bar­rass­ment and mis­takes. The big wagon, which will carry a heavy load and in which one can jour­ney far, means that there are at hand able helpers who give their sup­port and are equal to their task. One can load great re­spon­si­bil­i­ty upon such per­sons, and this is nec­es­sary in im­por­tant un­der­tak­ings.

Nine in the third place means:
A prince offers it to the Son of Heaven.
A petty man cannot do this.

A mag­nan­i­mous, lib­er­al-mind­ed man should not re­gard what he pos­sess­es as his ex­clu­sive per­son­al prop­er­ty, but should place it at the dis­pos­al of the ruler or of the peo­ple at large. In so doing, he takes the right at­ti­tude to­ward his pos­ses­sion, which as pri­vate prop­er­ty can never en­dure. A petty man is in­ca­pable of this. He is harmed by great pos­ses­sions, be­cause in­stead of sac­ri­fic­ing them, he would keep them for him­self.

Nine in the fourth place means:
He makes a difference
Between himself and his neighbor.
No blame.

This char­ac­ter­izes the po­si­tion of a man placed among rich and pow­er­ful neigh­bors. It is a dan­ger­ous po­si­tion. He must look nei­ther to the right nor to the left, and must shun envy and the temp­ta­tion to vie with oth­ers. In this way he re­mains free of mis­takes.

Six in the fifth place means:
He whose truth is accessible, yet dignified,
Has good fortune.

The sit­u­a­tion is very fa­vor­able. Peo­ple are being won not by co­er­cion but by un­af­fect­ed sin­cer­i­ty, so that they are at­tached to us in sin­cer­i­ty and truth. How­ev­er, benev­o­lence alone is not suf­fi­cient at the time of POS­SES­SION IN GREAT mea­sure. For in­so­lence might begin to spread. In­so­lence must be kept in bounds by dig­ni­ty; then good for­tune is as­sured.

Nine at the top means:
He is blessed by heaven.
Good fortune.
Nothing that does not further.

In the full­ness of pos­ses­sion and at the height of power, one re­mains mod­est and gives honor to the sage who stands out­side the af­fairs of the world. By this means one puts one­self under the benef­i­cent in­flu­ence de­scend­ing from heav­en, and all goes well. Con­fu­cius says of this line: “To bless means to help. Heav­en helps the man who is de­vot­ed; men help the man who is true. He who walks in truth and is de­vot­ed in his think­ing, and fur­ther­more reveres the wor­thy, is blessed by heav­en. He has good for­tune, and there is noth­ing that would not fur­ther.”