"Modest gentleman, humble and self-herding" means that people who are modest and strict with themselves should be humble and self-controlled, modest and prudent, and cultivate themselves.
Qian, the fifteenth of the sixty-four hexagrams in the Book of Changes written by Zhou Wenwang Ji Chang in the Western Zhou Dynasty, says: "The sixth day: a modest gentleman. Use Dachuan, Ji. The elephant said, "A modest gentleman is humble enough to feed himself."
The sixth day: Modesty, then modesty, is the manner that a gentleman should have. With this moral character, even if you risk wading across the river, it is auspicious. "Xiang Ci" said: A very humble gentleman is to cultivate himself from humility.
Appreciation of Poetry
This divination is devoted to the moral quality of modesty. Modest hexagrams symbolize modesty and humility. A gentleman with modesty can prosper in everything, and he will finish what he started. Modesty is the only one of the sixty-four hexagrams in which every hexagram is auspicious, and it also shows that humility is the most beneficial way to live and behave.
Modesty is a virtue, and it is a necessary moral character for a gentleman with status, status and education. Starting from this premise, we should further deepen the connotation of modesty from all angles and link it with other qualities. Traditionally, attention to moral and ethical issues seems to be regarded as the patent of Confucian philosophy, which is also the internal reason why Yijing has become a Confucian classic.