Page:The Ancient Science of Numbers by Luo Clement (1908).pdf/72

 and confident disposition, an “H,” to be genuinely successful, must be in harmony in most of its vibrations, for even a slight discord has a tendency to change its beneficent characteristics. Thus, while it may be highly sympathetic with one in the Triad of 3–6–9, it is extremely antagonistic to a 5 or a 7. As it possesses a duality of forces, its activities should not be confined to a single interest.

I, or 9. An “I” is largely a law unto itself. Being the Capstone of a Triad, or a completing number, its tendency is to finish whatever it undertakes. Being a strengthening force, however, it is likely to cause the repetition of work, making one do things over and over, until they meet the requirements of the ideal. These vibrations also manifest themselves in the matter of luck, an “I” having what are popularly termed “runs of luck,” or several pieces of good or bad fortune in rotation. If one is under the direct