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THE SMITH-WAITE
TAROT DECK®
BORDERLESS EDITION
ae
Or
K |
Based upon the original and only
authorized edition of the famous.
78-card Rider-Waite* Tarot Deck
Ss,
Original drawings by Pamela Colman Smith
under the direction of Arthur Edward Waite
U.S. GAMES SYSTEMS, INC.
Stamford, CT 06902 USA
[Link]Instructions excerpted from
THE KEY TO THE TAROT
by Arthur Edward Waite
Illustrations from the Rider Tarot Deck®,
also known as the Rider-Waite Tarot
and the Waite Tarot, are copyright
©1971, 1991 U.S. Games Systems, Inc.
Further reproduction prohibited.
The Rider Tarot Deck®, also known as the
Rider-Waite Tarot Deck®,
Waite Tarot Deck®, and Pamela
Colman Smith Tarot Deck® are registered
trademarks of U.S. Games Systems, Inc.
Stamford, CT 06902 USAINTRODUCTION
by Stuart R. Kaplan
The Borderless Smith-Waite Tarot Deck®
faithfully reproduces the original 1909 Tarot
deck created by Pamela Colman Smith. In 2009,
U.S. Games Systems, Inc. published the com-
plete Pamela Colman Smith Commemorative
Set, which features the Smith-Waite Tarot
Deck, and prints and postcards of Pamela’s
work. It also includes a 101-page book, The
Artwork & Times of Pamela Colman Smith, which
relates the story of her life and illustrates much
of her non-tarot art.
Tarot collectors shared with us that the
Commemorative Set was so special to them they
preferred to keep the complete set in pristine
condition. In response, U.S. Games Systems
issued a stand-alone version of the Smith-
Waite Centennial Tarot Deck for collectors who
wanted to do readings with that special deck.
Customers have also conveyed to us their desire
to have a borderless version of this iconic deck
so we are pleased to now present the Borderless
Smith-Waite Tarot Deck.
‘As a way of introducing those who may be
less familiar with Pixie’s background, we have
included in this deck four samples of Pixie’s
non-tarot art from our collection: An illustration
for the scene from Deirdre, Act II that appeared in
3The Green Sheaf, No. 7, Supplement, 1903; “Catch
Me”, an original watercolor painting, circa 1905,
by Pamela Colman Smith based on Schumann’s
Opus 10, No. 4; “Duet”, a 1946 watercolor
Pamela created to the music of Russian compos-
er Igor Stravinsky; and detail of the sheet music
illustration she created for “Christmas Carol” by
Edwin Waugh, printed by R.H. Russell in 1898.
DOSS
Dr. Arthur Edward Waite (1857-1942) was
a genuine scholar of occultism whose pub-
lished works include The Holy Kabbalah and
The Key to the Tarot first issued in England in
1910. Waite utilized symbolism as the key
to the Tarot pack. In The Key to the Tarot he
writes: “The true tarot is symbolism; it speaks
no other language and offers no other signs.”
What are the Tarot cards about which Waite so
skillfully writes? What is the message of each
card and when and where did these fascinating
cardboard symbols first originate?
The precise origin of Tarot cards in antiq-
uity remains obscure. Court de Gebelin writing
in Le Monde Primitif in 1781 advances the the-
ory that Tarot cards derived from an ancient
Egyptian book, The Book of Thoth. Thoth was
the Egyptian Mercury, said to be one of the
early Kings and the inventor of the hieroglyph-
ic system. Gebelin asserts that it is from the
4Egyptians and Gypsies that Tarot cards were
dispersed throughout Europe.
The emergence of Tarot cards in Europe
predates by over five centuries the work of
Waite. A German monk, Johannes, describes a
game called Ludas Cartarum played in the year
1377. Covelluzzo, a fifteenth-century chroni-
cler, relates the introduction into Viterbo of the
game of cards in the year 1379. It is generally
accepted that playing cards emerged in Europe
in the latter half of the fourteenth century,
probably first in Italy as a complete 78-card
deck. Or perhaps some inventive genius subse-
quently combined the common 56 cards known
as the Minor Arcana with the 22 esoteric and
emblematic Tarot cards known as the Major
Arcana to form the 78-card pack.
During the fifteenth century, Tarot cards
were generally drawn or hand painted for
the princely houses of Northern Italy and
France. Subsequently, the card packs became
more numerous because they were reproduced
by techniques using woodcuts, stencils, and
copper engraving. By the sixteenth century,
a modified Tarot pack called the Tarot of
Marseilles gained popularity.
There exists today, in the archives of the
Bibliotheque Nationale de France in Paris, 17
Major Arcana cards generally believed, prob-
ably erroneously, to have been hand painted
5about the year 1392 by Jacquemin Gringonneur
for Charles VI of France. These cards are like-
ly of later Venetian origin, possibly mid-fif-
teenth-century Tarocchi of Venice cards.
The Morgan Library & Museum in New York
City possesses 35 cards from a 78-card Tarot deck
dating from circa 1452-1455 and believed to be
the work of either Bonifacio Bembo or Antonio
Cicognara. This deck apparently belonged to
Cardinal Ascanio Maria Sforza (1445-1505) or to
his mother Bianca Visconti Sforza and was proba-
bly not intended for actual play but, instead, may
have been merely a pictorial representation of
the times.
Tarot fortune-telling readings generally take
into account not only the individual divinatory
meaning ofa card but also the proximity between
two or more cards and whether the card is
upright or reversed (which weakens, delays and
even reverses the meaning). The brief descriptive
title on each of the 22 Major Arcana cards serves
as a catalyst toward a broader and deeper mean-
ing, which the diviner seeks to express.
Tarot decks contain 78 cards divided into
two major groups:
+ 22 Major Arcana Cards
+ 56 Lesser Arcana Cards
The 22 Major Arcana or emblematic cards
comprise of 21 cards numbered from XXI to I
6(21 to 1) plus an unnumbered card known as
The Fool (Le Mat and Le Fou in French). The
22 Major Arcana are also referred to as trumps
(atouts in French, atutti or trionfi in Italian) sig-
nifying “above all.”
The 56 Lesser Arcana cards contain four
suits including the usual court cards; King,
Queen, Valet (Jack, Page) plus a fourth card,
the Cavalier (Knight, Knave), which is placed
between the Queen and the Valet. The suits
are generally swords (spades), batons or wands
(clubs), cups (hearts), and coins or pentacles
(diamonds). Suit origins are believed to rep-
resent the four estates of life during medieval
times: nobility or persons who held their rank
by military service were symbolized by swords;
peasants or working class people by clubs; cler-
gymen and statesmen by cups; and tradesmen
and the industrial class by coins.
Today’s ordinary decks of playing cards
seemingly descend from the medieval Tarot
decks. As card playing increased in popularity,
the Major Arcana cards were dropped (except
for The Fool which was retained as the Joker)
and the Cavalier and Valet were combined into
today’s Jack, thus giving us the standard deck of
fifty-two cards plus Joker.
Under the initiative and supervision of
Waite, a unique 78-card Tarot pack known
as “Rider Deck” was drawn by Miss Pamela
7Colman Smith, an artist who was a fellow mem-
ber of The Order of the Golden Dawn.
Miss Smith was brought up in Jamaica and
during her early teens traveled with the British
stage acting partnership of Ellen Terry and
Henry Irving. By the age of twenty-one Miss
Smith was established in England as a theatrical
designer and illustrator. Her interest in the
theatre led to her collaboration with William
Butler Yeats on stage designs. Subsequently,
she worked with his brother Jack Yeats on the
illustration and publication of a small magazine
entitled The Broad Sheet before bringing out her
own The Green Sheaf, which was filled with bal-
lads, pictures, folk tales, and verses.
The outstanding feature of the Rider Deck
is that all of the cards, including the forty pip
cards (numeral cards Ace to 10 in each of four
suits) are presented in emblematic designs,
which are readily suitable for divination. This
is in contrast to the rigid forms of swords,
batons, cups, and coins previously used in Tarot
decks. Waite also believed that The Fool, being
unnumbered and representing 0, should not
be placed between cards 20 and 21, and that
its more natural sequence fell in front of The
Magician in attribution to the first letter of the
Hebrew Alphabet, Aleph.
Waite transposed the numbers of two Major
Arcana cards: Strength (Force, Fortitude) more
8frequently shown in other Tarot decks—in par-
ticular Muller’s 1JJ deck and Grimaud’s Tarot
of Marseilles version—as XI, is instead shown in
the Rider Deck as VIII. Justice, more generally
shown as VIII, is designated by Waite as bearing
number XI.
One of the fascinating aspects about Tarot
cards is their personal affect upon the individ-
ual who uses them. Waite successfully presents
a new dimension to their meaning in The Key
to the Tarot. Any Tarot reader, be they a serious
scholar or a person dabbling in the occult,
will benefit from Waite’s insight and keen
perception.
U.S. Games Systems, Inc. is pleased to pub-
lish the Borderless Smith-Waite Tarot Deck,
based upon the authentic reproduction of the
original “Rider Pack.”
— Stuart R. Kaplan
Stamford, CT 06902
ScTHE GREATER ARCANA &
THEIR DIVINITORY MEANINGS
I. THE MAGICIAN—Skill, diplomacy, address,
sickness, pain, loss, disaster, self-confidence, will,
the Querent himself (if male). Reversed: Physician,
Magus, mental illness, disgrace, disquiet.
Il. THE HIGH PRIESTESS—Secrets, mystery,
the future as yet unrevealed, the woman who
interests the Querent (if male); the Querent
(if female) silence, tenacity; wisdom, science.
Reversed: Passion, moral or physical ardor, con-
ceit, surface knowledge.
Ill. THE EMPRESS—Fruitfulness, initiative,
action, long days, clandestine, the unknown,
difficulty, doubt, ignorance. Reversed: Light,
truth, the unraveling of involved matters, pub-
lic rejoice, also, according to another read-
ing—vacillation. .
IV. THE EMPEROR—Stability, power, aid,
protection, a great person, conviction, reason.
Reversed: Benevolence, compassion, credit, also
confusion to enemies, obstruction, immaturity.
V. THE HIEROPHANT—Marriage alliance,
captivity, servitude, mercy and goodness,
inspiration, the man to whom the Querent has
recourse. Reversed: Society, good understanding,
concord, over-kindness, weakness.
VI. THE LOVERS—Attraction, love, beauty, trials
overcome. Reversed: Failure, foolish designs,
10VU. THE CHARIOT—Succor, providence, also
war, triumph, presumption, vengeance, trouble.
Reversed: Riot, quarrel, dispute, litigation, defeat.
VIII. STRENGTH—Power, energy, action, cour-
age, magnanimity. Reversed: Abuse of power,
despotism, weakness, discord.
IX. THE HERMIT—Prudence, also and especial-
ly treason, dissimulation, corruption, roguery.
Reversed: Concealment, disguise, policy, fear,
unreasoned caution.
X. WHEEL OF FORTUNE—Destiny, fortune,
success, luck, felicity. Reversed: Increase, abun-
dance, superfluity.
XI. JUSTICE—Equity, rightness, probity, exec-
utive. Reversed: Law in all departments, bigotry,
bias, excessive severity.
XII. THE HANGED MAN—Wisdom, trials, cir-
cumspection, discernment, sacrifice, intuition,
divination, prophecy. Reversed: Selfishness, the
crowd, body politic.
XI. DEATH—End, mortality, destruction,
corruption. Reversed: Inertia, sleep, lethargy,
petrifaction, somnambulism.
XIV. TEMPERANCE—Economy, modera-
tion, frugality, management, accommodation.
Reversed: Things connected with churches,
religions, sects, the priesthood, also unfortunate
combinations, disunion, competing interests.
11XV. THE DEVIL—Ravage, violence, force,
vehemence, extraordinary efforts, fatality, that
which is predestined but not for this reason
evil. Reversed: Evil fatality, weakness, pettiness,
blindne:
XVI. THE TOWER—Misery, distress, ruin,
indigence, adversity, calamity, disgrace, decep-
tion. Reversed: According to one account,
the same in a lesser degree, also oppression,
imprisonment, tyranny.
XVII. THE STAR—Loss, theft, privation,
abandonment, although another reading
suggests hope and bright prospects in the
future. Reversed: Arrogance, impotence,
haughtiness.
XVIII. THE MOON—Hidden enemies, danger,
calumny, darkness, terror, deception, error.
Reversed: Instability, inconstancy, silence, lesser
degrees of deception and error.
XIX. THE SUN—Material happiness, fortunate
marriage, contentment. Reversed: The same in
a lesser sense.
XX. THE LAST JUDGMENT—Change of posi-
tion, renewal, outcome. Reversed: Weakness,
pusillanimity, simplicity, also deliberation,
decision, sentence.
XXI. THE WORLD—Assured success, route,
voyage, emigration, flight, change of place.
Reversed: Inertia, fixity, stagnation, permanence.
120. THE FOOL—Folly, mania, extravagance,
intoxication, delirium, frenzy, bewrayment.
Reversed: Negligence, absence, distribution,
carelessness, apathy, nullity, vanity.
It will be seen that, except where there
is an irresistible suggestion conveyed by the
surface meaning, that which is extracted from
the Trumps Major by the divinatory art is at
once artificial and arbitrary, as it seems to me,
in the highest degree. But of one order are
the mysteries of light and of another are those
of fantasy.
Oe
THE LESSER ARCANA
Otherwise, the Four Suits of Tarot Cards will
now be described according to their respective
classes by the pictures to each belonging, and
a harmony of their meanings provided from
all sources.
WANDS
KING OF WANDS—The physical and emotional
nature to which this card is attributed is dark,
ardent, lithe, animated, impassioned, noble.
He uplifts a flowering wand and wears, like his
three correspondences in the remaining suits,
what is called a cap of maintenance beneath
13his crown. He connects with the symbol of
the lion, which is emblazoned on the back of
his throne. Divinatory Meanings: Dark man,
friendly, countryman, generally married, honest
and conscientious. Reverse
: Good, but severe:
austere, yet tolerant.
QUEEN OF WANDS—Throughout thi
the wands are always in leaf, as it is a
suit of life and animation. Emotionally and
suit
otherwise, the Queen's personality corresponds to
that of the King, but is more magnetic. Divinatory
Meanings: A dark woman or a countrywom-
an, friendly, chaste, loving, honorable. If the
card beside her signifies a man, she is well dis-
posed towards him; if a woman, she is interested
in the Querent. Also, love of money. Reversed:
Good, economical, obliging, serviceable. Also sig-
nifies opposition, jealousy, deceit, and infidelity.
KNIGHT OF WANDS—He iy shown as if upon
a journey, armed with a short wand, and
although mailed is not on a warlike errand,
He js passing mounds or pyramids. Divinatory
Meanings: Departure, absence, flight, emigra-
tion, A dark young man, friendly, Change
of residence. Reversed: Rupture, division,
interruption, discord.
PAGE OF WANDS—In a scene similar to the
former, a young man stands in the act of
proclamation. He is unknown but faithful, and
his tidings are strange. Divinatory Meanings:
14Dark young man, faithful, a lover, an envoy, a
postman. Beside a man, he will bear favorable
testimony concerning him. He is a dangerous
rival, if followed by the Page of Cups. Has the
chief qualities of his suit. Reversed: Anecdotes,
announcements, evil news. Also indecision and
the instability which usually accompanies it.
TEN OF WANDS—A man oppressed by the
weight of the ten staves which he is carrying.
Divinatory Meanings: A card of many signifi-
cances, and some of the readings cannot be har-
monized. I set aside that which connects it with
honor and good faith. It is oppression simply,
but it is also fortune, gain, any kind of success
of these things. It is also a card of false-seeming,
disguise, perfidy. The place which the figure is
approaching may suffer from the rods that he
carries. Success is stultified if the Nine of Swords
follows, and if it is a question of a lawsuit—
there will be certain loss. Reversed: Contrarieties,
difficulties, intrigues, and their analogies.
NINE OF WANDS—The figure leans upon his
staff and has an expectant look, as if awaiting an
enemy. Behind him are eight other staves erect,
in orderly disposition, like a palisade. Divinatory
Meanings: The card signifies strength in
opposition. If attacked, he will meet the
onslaught boldly. With this main significance
there are all its possible adjuncts, including
delay, suspension, adjournment. Reversed:
Obstacles, adversity, calamity.
15sEIGHT OF WANDS—The card represents
motion through the immovable—a flight of
wands through an open country. Divinatory
Meanings: Activity in undertakings, the path of
ivity, swiftness, as that of an express
messenger; great haste, great hope, speed
towards an end which promises assured felicity;
that which is on the move, also the arrows of
love. Reversed: Arrows of jealousy, internal dis-
pute, stingings of conscience, quarrels.
SEVEN OF WANDS—A young man on a craggy
eminence, brandishing a staff, six other staves
are raised towards him from below. Divinatory
Meanings: It is a card of valor, for on the surface,
six are attacking one, who has, however, the
vantage position. On the intellectual plane, it
signifies discussion, wordy strife, in business—
negotiations, war of trade, barter, competition.
It is further a card of success, for the combatant
is on the top and his enemies may be unable
to reach him. Reversed: Perplexity, embarrass-
ments, anxiety.
SIX OF WANDS—A laureled horseman bears
staff adorned with laurel crown; footmen with
staves are at his side. Divinatory Meanings:
The card has been so designed that it can cover
several significations. On the surface, it is a
victor triumphing, but it is also great news,
such as might be carried in state by the King’s
courier. It is expectation crowned with its
16own desire, the crown of hope. Reversed:
Apprehension, fear—as of a victorious enemy
at the gate, treachery, disloyalty, as of gates
being opened to the enemy.
FIVE OF WANDS—A posse of youths are
brandishing staves, as if in sport or strife. It
is mimic warfare, and hereto correspond the
Divinatory Meanings: Imitation, for example,
sham fight, the strenuous competition and
struggle of the search after riches and fortune.
Hence some attributions say that it is a card
of gold, gain, opulence. Reversed: Trickery,
contradiction, litigation, disputes.
FOUR OF WANDS—From the four great staves
planted in the foreground there is a great
garland suspended, two female figures uplift
nosegays and at their side is a bridge over a moat,
leading to an old manorial house. Divinatory
Meanings: They are for once almost on the sur-
face—country life, repose, concord, harmony,
prosperity, peace, and the perfected work of
these. Reversed: The meaning remains unal-
tered—increase, felicity, beauty, embellishment.
THREE OF WANDS—A calm, stately figure,
with his back turned, looking from a cliff's edge
at ships passing over the sea. Three staves are
planted in the ground and he leans slightly on
one of them. Divinatory Meanings: He symbolizes
established strength, enterprise, effort, trade,
discovery, commerce; those are his ships, bear-
17ing his merchandise, which are sailing over the
sea. Reversed: The end of troubles, suspension or
end of adversity, disappointment, and toil.
TWO OF WANDS—A tall man looks from a
battlemented roof over sea and shore. He holds
a globe in his right hand and a staff in his left
rests on the battlement, another is fixed in
a ring. The Rose and Cross and Lily should
also be noticed on the left side. Divinatory
Meanings: Between the alternative readings there
is no marriage possible, on the one hand, riches,
fortune, magnificence. And on the other,
physical suffering, disease, chagrin, sadness,
mortification. The design gives one sugges-
tion—here is a lord overlooking his dominion
and alternately contemplating a globe. It looks
like the malady, the mortification, the sad-
ness of Alexander amidst the grandeur of this
world’s wealth. Reversed: Surprise, wonder,
enchantment, emotion, trouble, fear.
ACE OF WANDS—A hand issuing from a
cloud grasps a stout Wand or Club. Divinatory
Meanings: Creation, invention, enterprise,
the powers which result in these, principle,
beginning, source, birth, family, origin, the
beginning of enterprises, according to anoth-
er account—money, fortune, inheritance.
Reversed: Fall, decadence, ruin, perdition, to
perish, also—clouded joy.
18CUPS
KING OF CUPS—He holds a short scepter in
his left hand and a great cup in his right,
his throne is set upon the sea, on one side a
ship is riding and on the other a dolphin is
leaping. The implicit is that the sign of the Cup
naturally refers to water, which appears in all
the court cards. Divinatory Meanings: Fair man,
man of business, law, or divinity, responsible,
disposed to oblige the Querent. Also equity,
art and science, including those who profess
science, law and art, creative intelligence.
‘Reversed: Dishonest, double-dealing man,
roguery, exaction, injustice, vice, scandal.
QUEEN OF CUPS—Beautiful, fair, dreamy
woman (as one who sees visions in a cup).
Divinatory Meanings: Good, fair woman, honest,
devoted, who will do service to the Querent.
Loving intelligence, and hence the gift of vision,
success, happiness, pleasure, also wisdom,
virtue. Reversed: The accounts vary; good
woman, otherwise, distinguished woman but
“ one not to be trusted, perverse woman, vice,
dishonor, depravity.
KNIGHT OF CUPS—Graceful, not warlike,
riding quietly, wearing a winged helmet,
referring to the higher graces of the
imagination which sometimes characterize this
card. Divinatory Meanings: Arrival, approach—
sometimes that of a messenger, advances,
19proposition, demeanor, invitation, incitement.
Reversed: Trickery, artifice, subtlety, swindling,
duplicity, fraud.
PAGE OF CUPS—A fair, pleasing, somewhat
effeminate Page, of studious and intent aspect,
contemplates a fish rising from a cup to look
at him. Divinatory Meanings: Fair young man,
one impelled to render service and with whom
the Querent will be connected, a studious
youth, news, message, application, reflection,
meditation—also these things directed to
business, Reversed: Taste, inclination, attach-
ment, seduction, deception, artifice.
TEN OF CUPS—Appearance of Cups in a
rainbow, it is contemplated in wonder and
ecstasy by a man and woman below, evidently
husband and wife. His right arm is about her,
his left raised upward as she raises her right
arm. The two children dancing near them
have not observed the prodigy, but are happy
after their own manner. There is a home scene
beyond. Divinatory Meanings: Contentment,
repose of the entire heart—the perfection of
that state, if with several picture cards, a person
who is taking charge of the Querent’s interests.
Also the town, village or country inhabited
by the Querent. Reversed: Repose of the false
heart, indignation, violence.
NINE OF CUPS—The goodly personage is
feasting to his heart’s content, and abundant
20red count-
refreshment of wine is on the i
er behind him. Divinatory Meanings: Concord,
contentment, physical bien-tre; also victory,
success, advantage, satisfaction for the Querent
or person for whom the consultation is made.
Reversed: l'ruth, loyalty, liberty. But the readings
vary and include mistakes, imperfections, etc.
EIGHT OF CUPS—A man of dejected aspect
ity, enterprise,
undertaking or previous concern. Divinatory
is deserting the cups of his fel
Meanings: ‘The card speaks for itself on the
surface, but other readings are entirely anti-
thetical—giving joy, mildness, timidity, honor,
modesty. Reversed: Great joy, happiness, feasting.
SEVEN OF CUPS—Strange chalices of vision.
Divinatory Meanings: Fairy favors, images of
reflection, imagination, sentiment, things seen
in the glass of contemplation, some attainment
in these degrees but nothing permanent or
substantial is suggested. Reversed: Desire, will,
determination, project.
SIX OF CUPS—Children in an old garden, their
cups filled with flowers. Divinatory Meanings: A
card of memories and of the past. For example,
reflecting on childhood, happiness, enjoyment,
but coming rather from the past, things that
have vanished. Another reading reverses this,
suggesting new relations, new environment and
new knowledge. Reversed: Renewal, the future,
that which will come to pass presently.
21FIVE OF CUPS—A dark, cloaked figure looks
at three prone cups; two other cups stand
upright behind him. A bridge is in the back-
ground. Divinatory Meanings: It is a card of
loss, but something remains; three have
been taken, but two are left. It is a card of
inheritance, transmission, and patrimony. It
may be a card of marriage, but not without
bitterness or frustration. Reversed: News, alli-
ances, affinity, ancestry, return, false projects.
FOUR OF CUPS—A young man is seated under a
tree and contemplates three cups set on the grass
before him. He expresses discontent with his
environment. An arm issuing from a cloud offers
him another cup. Divinatory Meanings: Weariness,
disgust, aversion, imaginary vexations—as if
the wine of this world had caused satiety only.
Another cup of wine, as if a fairy gift, is now
offered him, but he sees no consolation therein.
This is also a card of blended pleasure. Reversed:
Novelty, omen, new instructions, new relations.
THREE OF CUPS—Maidens in a garden
celebrate with cups uplifted, as if pledg-
ing one another. Divinatory Meanings:
The conclusion of any matter. Plenty,
perfection, merriment, happiness, victory,
fulfillment, solace, healing. Reversed: Expedition,
dispatch, achievement, end.
TWO OF CUPS—A youth and maiden are pledg-
ing to one another. Above their cups rises the
22caduceus of Hermes, between whose great wings
there appears a lion’s head. Divinatory Meanings:
Love, passion, friendship, affinity, union, concord,
sexual relations. That which nature has sanctified.
Reversed: False love, folly, misunderstanding.
ACE OF CUPS—The waters are beneath,
upon which are water lilies. The hand issues
from the cloud, holding in its palm the cup,
from which four streams are pouring. A
dove, bearing in its beak a cross-marked host,
descends to place the wafer in the cup—the dew
of water is falling on all sides. It is an intimation
of that which may lie behind the Lesser
Arcana. Divinatory Meanings: True heart, joy,
contentment, abode, nourishment, abundance,
fertility, holy table, felicity. Reversed: False
heart, mutation, instability, revolution.
SWORDS
KING OF SWORDS—He sits in judgment, hold-
ing the unsheathed sign of his suit. Divinatory
Meanings: Whatsoever arises out of the idea
of judgment and all its connections—power,
command, authority, militant intelligence, law,
offices of the crown, and so forth. Reversed:
Cruelty, evil intentions, perversity, barbarity,
breach of faith.
QUEEN OF SWORDS—Her right hand _rais-
es the weapon vertically and the hilt rests on
an arm of her royal chair. The left hand is
23extended, the arm raised, her countenance is
severe, chastened, and suggests familiarity with
sorrow. Divinatory Meanings: Widowhood,
female sadness and embarrassment, absence,
sterility, mourning, privation, separation.
Reversed: Malice, bigotry, artifice, prudery, deceit.
KNIGHT OF SWORDS—In full course, as if
scattering his enemies. Divinatory Meanings:
Skill, bravery, capacity, defense, address,
enmity, wrath, war, destruction, opposi-
tion, resistance, ruin. Reversed: Imprudence,
incapacity, extravagance.
PAGE OF SWORDS—A lithe, active figure holds
a sword upright in both hands, while in the
act of swift walking. Divinatory Meanings:
Authority, overseeing, secret service, vigilance,
spying, examination, and the qualities thereto
belonging. Reversed: More evil side of these
qualities, what is unforeseen, an unprepared
state, sickness is also intimated.
TEN OF SWORDS—A prostrate figure, pierced
by all the swords belonging to the card.
Divinatory Meanings: Whatsoever is intimated by
the design—also pain, affliction, tears, sadness,
desolation. Reversed: Advantage, profit, success,
favor, but none of these are permanent. Also
power and authority.
NINE OF SWORDS—One seated on her couch
in lamentation with the swords over her.
Divinatory Meanings: Death, failure, miscarriage,
24delay, deception, disappointment, despair.
Reversed: Imprisonment, doubt, suspicion,
reasonable fear, shame.
EIGHT OF SWORDS—A woman, bound and
hoodwinked, with the swords of the card about
her. Divinatory Meanings: Bad news, violent
chagrin, crisis, censure, power in trammels,
conflict, calumny—also sickness. Reversed:
Disquiet, difficulty, opposition, accident,
treachery, the unforeseen, fatality.
SEVEN OF SWORDS—A man in the act of
carrying away five swords rapidly, the two
others of the card remain stuck in the ground.
A camp close at hand. Divinatory Meanings:
Design, attempt, wish, hope, confidence—also
quarrelling. A plan that may fail, annoyance.
Reversed: Good advice, counsel, instruction,
slander, babbling.
SIX OF SWORDS—A ferryman carrying passen-
gers in his punt to the further shore. Divinatory
Meanings: Journey by water, route, way,
envoy, commissionary, expedient. Reversed:
Declaration, confession, publicity. One account
says that it is a proposal of love.
FIVE OF SWORDS—A disdainful man looks
after two retreating and dejected figures. Their
two swords lie upon the ground. He carries two
others on his left shoulder, and a third sword
is in his right hand, point to earth. He is the
master in possession of the field. Divinatory
25Meanings: Degradation, destruction, reversal,
infamy, dishonor, loss. Reversed: The same—
burial and obsequies.
FOUR OF SWORDS—The effigy of a Knight in
the attitude of prayer, at full length upon his
tomb. Divinatory Meanings: Vigilance, retreat,
solitude, hermit’s repose, exile, tomb and coffin.
Reversed: Wise administration, circumspection,
economy, avarice, precaution, testament.
THREE OF SWORDS—Three swords pierc-
ing a heart, cloud and rain behind. Divinatory
Meanings: Removal, absence, delay, division,
rupture, dispersion, and all that the design
signifies naturally. Reversed: Mental alienation,
error, loss, distraction, disorder, confusion.
TWO OF SWORDS—A hoodwinked figure bal-
ances two swords upon her shoulders. Divinatory
Meanings: Conformity and the equipoise which it
suggests, courage, friendship, affection, concord
ina state of arms, intimacy. Reversed: Imposture,
falsehood, duplicity, disloyalty.
ACE OF SWORDS—A hand issues from a cloud,
grasping a sword, the point of which is encir-
cled by a crown. Divinatory Meanings: Triumph,
the excessive degree in everything, conquest,
triumph of force. A card of great force, in love as
well as in hatred. Reversed: The same meanings,
but the results are disastrous; another account
says—conception, childbirth, augmentation,
multiplicity.
26PENTACLES
KING OF PENTACLES—The figure calls for
no special description. The face is rather
dark, suggesting also courage, but somewhat
lethargic in tendency. The bull’s head should
be noted as a recurrent symbol on his throne.
The sign of this suit is represented throughout
as engraved or blazoned with the pentagram,
typifying the correspondence of the four
elements in human nature and that by which
they may be governed. Divinatory Meanings:
Valor, realizing intelligence, business and
normal intellectual aptitude, sometimes
mathematical gifts and attainments of this
kind—success in these paths. Reversed: Vice,
weakness, ugliness, perversity, corruption, peril.
QUEEN OF PENTACLES—The face suggests that
of a dark woman, whose qualities might be
summed up in the idea of greatness of soul. She
has also the serious cast of intelligence—she
contemplateshersymboland mayseeworldsthere-
in. Divinatory Meanings: Opulence, magnificence,
generosity, security, liberty. Reversed: Evil, fear,
suspicion, suspense, mistrust.
KNIGHT OF PENTACLES—He rides a slow,
enduring, heavy horse, to which his own aspect
corresponds. Divinatory Meanings: Utility, inter-
est, serviceableness, rectitude, responsibility.
Reversed: Inertia, idleness, repose of that kind,
stagnation—also discouragement, carelessness.
27PAGE OF PENTACLES—A youthful figure, look-
ing intently at the pentacle that hovers over his
raised hands. Divinatory Meanings: Application,
study scholarship, reflection. Another reading
says news, messages and the bringer thereof—
also rule, management. Reversed: Prodigality,
dissipation, liberality, luxury, unfavorable news.
TEN OF PENTACLES—A man and woman
beneath an archway which gives entrance to a
house and domain. Divinatory Meanings: Gain,
riches, family matters, archives, extraction, the
abode of a family. Reversed: Chance, fatality,
loss, robbery, games of hazard; sometimes gift,
dowry, pension.
NINE OF PENTACLES—A woman, with a bird
upon her wrist, stands amidst a great abundance
of grapevines in the garden of a great house.
Divinatory Meanings: Prudence, safety, suc-
cess, accomplishment, certitude, discernment.
Reversed: Roguery, deception, voided project,
bad faith.
EIGHT OF PENTACLES—An artist in stone at
work. Divinatory Meanings: Work, employment,
commission, craftsmanship, skill in craft and
business. Reversed: Voided ambition, vanity,
cupidity, exaction, usury.
SEVEN OF PENTACLES—A young man,
leaning on his staff, looks intently at seven
pentacles attached to a clump of greenery on
his right. One would say that these were his
28treasures and that his heart was there. Divinatory
Meanings: ‘These are exceedingly contradictory,
in the main, it is a card of money, business, bar-
ter—but one reading gives altercation, quarrel,
and another innocence, ingenuity, purgation.
Reversed: Anxiety about money.
SIX OF PENTACLES—One in the guise of a
merchant weighs money in a pair of scales
and distributes it to the needy and distressed.
Divinatory Meanings: Presents, gifts, gratifica-
tion. Another account says attention, vigilance,
now is the accepted time, present prosperity,
etc. Reversed: Desire, cupidity, envy, jealousy,
illusion
FIVE OF PENTACLES—Two mendicants in a
snowstorm pass a lighted casement. Divinatory
Meanings: It foretells material trouble above all,
whether in the form illustrated, that is, destitu-
tion, or otherwise. For some cartomancists, it is
a card of love and lovers—wife, husband, friend,
mistress—also concordance, affinities. These
alternatives cannot be harmonized. Reversed:
Disorder, chaos, ruin, discord, profligacy.
FOUR OF PENTACLES—A crowned figure,
having a pentacle over his crown, clasps another
with hands and arms; two pentacles are under
his feet. Divinatory Meanings: The surety of
possessions, cleaving to that which one has,
gifts, legacy, inheritance. Reversed: Suspense,
delay, opposition,
29THREE OF PENTACLES—A sculptor at his work
in a monastery. Divinatory Meanings: Métier,
trade, skilled labor. Usually, however, regarded
as a card of nobility, aristocracy, renown, glory.
Reversed: Mediocrity in work and otherwise,
puerility, pettiness, weakness.
TWO OF PENTACLES—A young man in the act
of dancing has a pentacle in either hand, and
they are joined by that endless cord which is like
the number eight reversed. Divinatory Meanings:
It is represented as a card of gaiety, recreation
and its connections, which is the subject of the
design. But it is read also as news and messages
in writing, such as obstacles, agitation, trouble,
embroilment. Reversed: Enforced gaiety, sim-
ulated enjoyment, literal sense, handwriting,
composition, letters of exchange.
ACE OF PENTACLES—A hand—issuing, as
usual, from a cloud—holds up a pentacle.
Divinatory Meanings: Perfect contentment,
felicity, ecstasy—also speedy intelligence, gold.
Reversed: The evil side of wealth, bad intelli-
gence. Also great riches.
30THE CELTIC CROSS
CARD SPREAD
Significator Card
CSS
[|
Instructions for card lay out
follow on pages 32-35.
31
10THE ART OF
TAROT DIVINATION
Cups are assumed to represent people with
light brown hair and of fair complexion; Wands
represent those having yellow or red hair and
blue eyes; Swords correspond to persons with
dark brown hair and possibly gray, hazel or even
blue eyes; Pentacles answer to very dark people.
The procedure is as follows:
Select the Significator of the person or thing
about whom or which the inquiry is made. It
is the card which, in the reader’s judgment or
experience, is the most representative, and is
not, therefore, of necessity the Magician or High
Priestess mentioned in the official divinatory
meanings. Place the Significator in the middle.
Let the reader and querent shuffle and cut the
remainder of the deck three times each.
Turn up the FIRST CARD; cover the
Significator therewith, and say; “That covers
him.” This is the person or thing’s general envi-
ronment at the time, the influence with which
he is actuated all through.
Turn up the SECOND CARD; put it across
him horizontally, and say: “This represents his
obstacles.” If it is a favorable card, it will be
something good in itself, but not productive of
good in the particular connection.
Turn up the THIRD CARD; place it above
the head of the Significator, and say: “This
32crowns him.” It represents (a) the best that he
can arrive at, or (b) his ideal in the matter; (c)
what he wants to make his own; (d) but it is not
his own at present.
Turn up the FOURTH CARD; place it below
the feet of the Significator, and say: “This is
beneath him.” It is his own—that which he has
to work with and can use.
Turn up the FIFTH CARD; place it on the
side that the Significator is looking away from,
and say: “This is behind him.” It is the current
from which he is passing away, and it may be
the past of the matter.
Turn up the SIXTH CARD; place it on the
side that the Significator is facing, and say: “This
is before him.” It is the current that is coming
into action and will operate in the specific
matter.
The first six cards (plus the Significator card)
are now disposed in the form of a cross. The
next four cards are turned up in succession and
placed to your right, one card above another.
The SEVENTH signifies himself, his attitude
and relation to the matter.
The EIGHTH CARD signifies his house, his
environment in the affair—the influence, peo-
ple and events about him.
The NINTH CARD signifies his hopes
and fears.
33The TENTH CARD represents what will
come. It is on this card that you concentrate
your intuitive powers, your experience and
your memory in respect to the official divi-
natory meanings attached thereto. It should
include whatsoever you may have divined from
the other cards on the table, including the
Significator itself and concerning him or it, not
excepting such lights upon higher significance
as might fall like sparks from heaven if the card
which serves for the oracle, the card for reading,
should happen to be a Trump Major.
Thus basing your calculations, if you obtain
a decisive judgment the reading is over, and you
have only to formulate the result.
In conclusion, as regards the question of
complexions, their allocation to the Suits need
not be taken conventionally. You can go by
the temperament of a person; one who is
exceedingly dark may be very energetic, and
would be better represented by a Sword card
than a Pentacle. On the other hand, a very fair
person who was indolent and lethargic should
be allocated to Cups rather than Wands.
Great facility may be obtained by this method
in a comparatively short time, allowance being
always made for the gifts of the reader.
34NOTESFor our complete line of tarot decks, books,
meditation cards, oracle sets, and other
inspirational products please
visit our website:
[Link]
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