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- 6 Shows the subject advancing with great pride in his strength. He advances but
- 6 will not succeed. There will be grounds for blame.
- 5 The subject is full of apprehension and appealing for sympathy and help. Late
- 5 at night hostile measures may be taken against him but he need not be anxious
- 5 about them.
- 4 Shows the subject about to advance with strong and determined looks. There
- 4 will be evil. The superior man, bent on cutting off the culprit, will walk
- 4 alone and will be hated by his proper associates as though he were
- 4 contaminated by the others. There will in the end be no blame against him.
- 3 Shows one from whose buttocks the skin has been stripped, so that he walks
- 3 slowly and with difficulty. If he would act like a sheep led after its
- 3 companions, occassion for regret would disappear. But though he hear these
- 3 words he will not believe nor understand them.
- 2 RULING LINE: Shows small men who should be uprooted like a clump of weeds.
- 2 Such a determined action would involve no error or blame.
- 1 MAJOR RULING LINE: Shows the subject with no helpers on whom he can call.
- 1 There will be evil.
-