P. Scott Hollander Tarot For Beginners
P. Scott Hollander Tarot For Beginners
P. Scott Hollander Tarot For Beginners
Your Tarot deck can answer not only the simple ques
tions you many ask a fortuneteller, but also the deeper
questions that ultimately direct your life. And if you
begin an intense study of the Tarot for the purpose of per
sonal spiritual development, you will eventually develop
your own interpretations of the visual images on the
cards.
But you need to start somewhere. You need to
know the basic meanings of the cards before the Tarot
can really "speak" to you in your own language. T hat's
how Tarot for Beginners can help-by clearly describ
ing and interpreting the symbolism of each of the 22
Major Arcana cards and the 56 Minor Arcana cards, and
by showing you how to lay out the cards and interpret
them in relation to each other.
The final judge of the true meaning of the Tarot is
you. The Tarot is a key-and where there's a key, there's
a door. Somewhere on the other side of this particular
door, you will find the answers to all of your questions,
whether simple or complex, secular or religious, spiri
tual or mundane. Let P. Scott Hollander-a student,
teacher and reader of the Tarot for more than 20 years
show you what doors the Tarot can open for you.
About the Author
P. Scott Hollander has studied and used the Tarot for more
than 20 years. Over the years, she has done more readings
than she can count, both face to face and at long distance. She
has also used the cards for counseling and some magical
operations and has taught their use as meditation tools. (She
feels she has reached the level of The Star in her own studies.)
A professional freelance writer, she has been writing and
publishing books, articles, and short stores for more than 25
years. She has been writing full-time since 1989. Her non-fic
tion texts and articles primarily cover arcane subjects, includ
ing a 1991 Llewelyn release, Reading Between the Lines: The
Basics of Handwriting Analysis.
P. Scott Hollander
c/o Llewellyn Worldwide
P.O. Box 64383-K363, St. Paul, MN 55164-0383
Please enclose a self-addressed, stamped envelope for reply, or $1.00 to cover
costs and an international postal reply coupon if necessary.
P. Scott Hollander
1995
Llewellyn Publications
St. Paul, Minnesota 55164-0383
Tarot for Beginners. Copyright© 1995 by P. Scott Hollander.
All rights reserved. Printed in the United States of America.
No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any man
ner whatsoever without written permission from Llewellyn
Publications except in the case of brief quotations embodied
in critical articles and reviews.
FIRSTEomoN
Second Printing, 1995
Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Hollander, P. Scott
Tarot for beginners: an easy guide to understanding &
interpreting the tarot/ by P. Scott Hollander. -- 1st ed.
p. em.
ISBN 1-56718-363-8
1. Tarot. 2. Fortune telling by cards. 3. Divination. I. Title
BF1879.T2H63 1995
133.3'2424--dc20 94-43321
CIP
Llewellyn Publications
A Division of Llewellyn Worldwide, Ltd.
P.O. Box 64383, St. Paul, MN 55164-0383
A prisoner devoid of books, had he a Tarot of which he knew
how to make use, might in a few years possess a universal
science, and discourse on all possible subjects with an
u nequalled doctrine and inexhaustible eloquence.
-Eliphas Levi
Dedication
For, my mom, Florence Hollander, who helped me look
inside my soul and find my own path.
Table of Contents
Introduction: Before You Begin ix
ix
x Tarot for Beginners
·
The
I
Major Ar
·
I.
cana ·
·
I.
I
��
Trumps
�--�
INTRODUCTION TO
THE MAJOR ARCANA
3
4 • Tarot for Beginners
�r�
THE Ml\GICII\.N
��
Trumps One
�--�
THE MAGICIAN
Represents
Human intelligence; worldly wisdom. Control of (or,
the need to control and manipulate) the forces that
operate in this world.
Description
In most decks, the Magician is male; in all decks, this
figure stands alone. Male or female, the Magician has a
young face and wise eyes; he is ageless.
Costume varies, depending on the deck, from
Egyptian to Greek to Medieval. The Magician always,
however, wears a belt, and in some decks this belt is a
coiled serpent (possibly Ourobouros, the alchemical
15
16 · Tarot for Beginners
Meaning
Whether you think of this card as The Magician or The
Juggler, the allegory is the same. Consider that everything
in the universe is spread out before God like the objects
on The Juggler's table, and these elements of creation are
Trumps One· 17
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): Strength of will, intuition, self
control, self-confidence, autonomy, diplomacy. The
positive qualities of humankind: skill, initiative,
intelligence, discernment, and comprehension; freedom
from control by others. All leading to success and the
ability to control your environment.
18 • Tarot for Beginners
OCHUN
z: 0
:::J X
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(/)
0 3
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Trumps Two
��
Represents
Divine wisdom; enlightenment. Understanding of (or
the need to understand) the reasons things work the
way they do.
Description
A female figure, either seated or standing. If standing,
she is holding a staff and pointing toward something in
the distance; if seated, in many decks she is holding an
open book, representing the divine law that rules and
orders the universe. Again, costume may vary, but
21
22 • Tarot for Beginners
Meaning
If you opt for the right-hand path of spiritual growth,
then The High Priestess is your next step. She under
stands the workings of the universe, the why of things.
And she uses her understanding not to control and
manipulate, but to nurture, teach, and protect.
This card represents the ability to understand and
interpret the word of God; the understanding of the
Law which is the highest and best use of our intellec
tual ability.
Trumps Two · 23
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): Wisdom, serenity, knowledge and
understanding. Judgement, learning, mystery, science,
art. The ability to learn and to teach. Also; possible
secrets that will be revealed in their proper time.
Reversed (or Negative): Superficial knowledge,
even ignorance; inability to judge events and issues
clearly; muddy thinking; prejudice and one-sidedness.
Also, a reluctance, or fear of making decisions.
The High Priestess is the one who knows the
Way-and is willing to lead you there, if you're willing
to go. If this card represents the querent, then you are
one who is able to set others on the right road. But be
careful. Don't be so concerned with their well-being
that you neglect your own opportunities.
��
The Empress is the
matriarch incarnate,
representing security,
comfort (both physical
and emotional), and
understanding.
�--�
nr
��
Trumps Three
THE EMPRESS
Represents
The Mother, procreation, and domestic harmony-not
just in the individual home, but in society as a whole.
Description
Mature female figure seated on a throne, dressed in fine
robes. She holds a scepter and is wearing an imperial
crown. In some decks, a shield, or coat of arms, is at her
feet, leaning against the foot of her throne. Also, in
some decks, her throne is in a garden; in most decks she
is outside. The Empress is a mother figure, with all that
that implies: she is both a creative force and the one
who insures that the different elements she brings into
25
26 · Tarot for Beginners
Meaning
The Empress is the female ruler of the house-the
Mother. She understands how things have to work in
this world in order for her subjects (whom she treats as
her children) to be safe, happy, and content; she has the
power to make certain things do work in harmony.
She is also the symbol of feminine instinct-intu
itive flashes that enable you to make the right decision
when there is no time for conscious thought. She is pro
tection and fertility. She teaches love between people
(the union of souls, as opposed to mere sexual attrac
tion). As the Mother, she is the door or gate through
which we enter this world; as a ruler, she insures har
mony and the ability of people to work with each other,
rather than at odds with each other. The Empress is the
ruling force which creates an environment in which each
person is free to develop their own individual potential.
Trumps Three • 27
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): Fruitfulness of action, beauty,
personal development and progress. Domestic har
mony. Marriage, and maternity. Long life. Understand
ing derived from personal experience. Both emotional
and physical comforts; she provides not only the neces
sities of life, but also luxuries.
Reversed (or Negative): The unknown. Doubts
and difficulties. Indecision. Selfishness. Loss of power,
inability to solve problems or make useful plans. Vacil
lation, ignorance.
The Empress is the one who knows how to make
this world run smoothly, if you are willing to listen (to
her) and cooperate (with others). If this card represents
the querent, then you are one who can make things
work smoothly and well for others-if you can make
them listen and understand.
�-�
The Emperor represents
a different kind of
worldly wisdom: the
understanding that it
is not enough to want
peace and security, or
even to teach it; some-
times you have to be
willing-<�nd able
to defend it.
THE EMPEROR.
Trumps Four
�--�
THE EMPEROR
Represents
The Father. Worldly power, and protection of those for
whom he is responsible.
Description
Mature male figure (usually with a full beard) either
seated on or leaning against a throne. He wears his
robes over a full suit of armor. He carries a scepter and
wears an imperial crown. In some decks, a shield or
coat of arms rests beside his throne or at his feet. Again,
his throne is outdoors, sometimes with mountains in
the distance. The essence of this card is protection-the
willingness to fight for the domestic harmony that the
29
30 : Tarot for Beginners
Meaning
The Emperor is also a wise teacher. In this case what he
teaches is the meaning and use of worldly power. There
are forces that no amount of good will or proper train
ing can overcome: sometimes you have to be willing to
pick up a sword. The Emperor teaches that you cannot
compromise with your conscience; what is worth hav
ing must also be worth fighting for, if necessary. As the
male protector of the home, The Emperor is ruler and
patriarch, the defender of his world. The Emperor rep
resents a different kind of worldly wisdom: the under
standing that it is not enough to want peace and
security, or even to teach it; sometimes you have to be
willing-and able-to defend it.
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): Authority, accomplishment,
worldly power, stability, wisdom, ambition, reasoned
action. Leadership, and ability to govern wisely. Com
passion. Protection. Aid. Goals reached and won.
Reversed (or Negative): Immaturity and confu
sion. Loss of power. Problems with enemies. Inability to
reach your goals; dissipation of energy.
As the Empress teaches people to work together,
the Emperor guards this safe home against dangers
from outside. If this card represents the querent, then
you are one who is able to defend-and willing to die
for-the people and things you treasure. Make certain
that whatever you are defending is worth dying for.
Trumps Four 31
•
�.!�
The High Priest in the
Tarot specifically rep
resents religious
authority-the search
for truth, the inter
preter ofsecret myster
ies, the one who points
the way to salvation
(or whatever your ulti
mate spiritual goal
may be).
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EL BABALOCHA
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02
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co
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co
w
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1-
Trumps Five
�--�
Represents
Divine Will; interpretation of the Law of God in terms
of personal and social codes of behavior.
Description
A male figure, seated on a throne. He is dressed in
priestly vestments, crowned, and holding a scepter,
usually in his left hand. The High Priest's accou
trements depend on which deck you are using. His
scepter bears the representative symbol of whatever
religion the deck's designer follows; his crown and
33
34 · Tarot for Beginners
Meaning
Whatever your supreme deity, it is evident that he or
she does not descend from the heavens at regular inter
vals to speak directly to the general populace. So most,
if not alt religions have individuals whose task it is to
interpret the divine will for their followers. The more
organized or structured the religion, the greater the
authority of its High Priest.
The point to remember here is that it is not only in
organized religion that some human representative
possesses this kind of authority. The High Priest in the
Tarot specifically represents religious authority, the
search for truth, the interpreter of secret mysteries, the
one who points the way to salvation (or whatever your
ultimate spiritual goal may be).
But this figure also symbolizes any organized
philosophical or educational institution, be it religious
or temporat that exerts that kind of mind control over
Trumps Five • 35
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): Mercy, goodness, kindness,
alliance (including possible marriage). Creativity. The
search for Truth. Understanding and inspiration. Reli
gious needs and inclinations. Moral courage; the ability
to go your own road if you believe it's right, despite
opposition.
Reversed (or Negative): Extreme conservatism;
over-kindness or over-conformity. Servitude, captivity,
_
weakness. Need to be socially approved and accepted.
The need to conform. Loss of personal authority (or,
36 • Tarot for Beginners
c�n�
THE LOV E R S .
��
Trumps Six
�r�
THE LOVERS
Represents
Union of opposites; commitment.
Description
Not counting supernatural figures (described below),
some decks show only two young lovers, who may be
either clothed or nude. Others show a third person
either observing or in some way influencing the out
come of their match. In several medieval-style decks the
third party is an older man; he may be either an
observer, or a parental figure to whom the young cou
ple are evidently explaining themselves. In Egyptian
style decks, the trio shows a young man and two young
women between whom he obviously has to choose.
39
40 · Tarot for Beginners
Meaning
The Lovers allegory is of a union of opposites, pictured
here as male and female, and of the mystical bond
between those who are alike in spirit. It can refer to
romantic love, or an ideal friendship, or some other
close bond between two people, especially when there
has been some kind of barrier or opposition which the
two souls involved must or will overcome in order to
join. If this is the case, then it is mutual commitment
that is the essential element which unites those whose
lives must run together.
But there are other kinds of "marriage," and other
kinds of opposites that need to be reconciled. As an alle
gory of your personal spiritual development, The
Lovers depicts the union of opposites within yourself.
Each of us has qualities which we perceive as positive
or negative, and traits which are apparently in conflict.
And for each of these qualities or traits, there are those
Trumps Six • 41
In th@'Reading
Upright (or Positive): Attraction, love, problems or tri
als overcome by harmony, union, cooperation. Wise
decisions: the correct choice made (perhaps between
two equally worthy goals); a possible struggle, but with
happiness as the outcome
Reversed (or Negative): Failure, conflict, division,
immature planning, frustration. Unrealistic goals. Poor
choices. Unhappiness.
As the High Priest card suggests that your best
road is to develop your own will rather than accept the
requirements of others, The Lovers reminds you that
those others--either people or forces-have characteris
tics or elements that you need to survive and grow. If
this card represents the querent, then you are about to
be faced with an important choice that will influence
the course of your life from now on. You must decide
hopefully wisely-what you are going to do. And
whatever you choose, you must commit your energies
to making it work if you expect to succeed.
Trumps Six • 43
The Chariot pictures
mastery of real
opposites, control over
and use of those things
which are by their
nature in conflict.
�--�
��
Trumps Seven
THE CHARIOT
Represents
Victory. Mastery of opposing forces by decision and
strength of will.
Description
A royal male figure driving a chariot. In most decks he
is crowned, and usually wearing full armor. The chariot
has a canopy so constructed that this figure is also
between two pillars.
The chariot is pulled by two beasts, which may be
either real or mystical-horses, sphinxes, sometimes
unicorns or winged horse-like creatures. In some decks,
the two draft animals are opposite colors (as white and
45
46 · Tarot for Beginners
Meaning
Having reconciled the opposites within yourself to the
point where you are able to draw on them at need, you
are now in a position to overcome your real enemies.
Just as a chariot in battle runs down enemy forces,
The Chariot in the Tarot symbolizes victory over all
who oppose you. These are not elements (as in
Arcanum Six) that can be made to reconcile and work
together. They are forces which are by their nature
enemies: good and evil, positive and negative, right and
wrong. In some cases, they may still be factors within
yourself which you must force to work in tandem, if not
in agreement. Just as often, these opposing forces
represent people or events in your life which are
working to prevent you from reaching your goals.
Because you have drawn strength from the
opposites within yourself by making them work
Trumps Seven · 47
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): Conquest. Triumph over enemies
or obstacles. May sometimes mean revenge. Victory over
great odds; also, mastery of opposing forces. Can also
mean that you will receive help or advice in a moment of
great need (like the cavalry coming over the hill).
Reversed (or Negative): Conflict, war, trouble.
Defeat or disharmony. Quarrels, disputes. Being
overpowered by enemies or obstacles.
The Chariot offers you the means to take what
you've learned so far and use it to overcome anyone or
anything trying to prevent you from reaching your
goals. If this card represents the querent, then whether
or not you are aware of it, you are now in a position to
defeat your enemies and force them to accept your
terms. Look within yourself. The strength is there.
��
This is divine
justice as opposed to
human justice:
absolutely impartial
and strictly fair.
�·�
�U.ST I C E .
Trumps Eioht
JUSTICE
Represents
Impartial and unbiased justice. Strict fairness.
Description
A female figure, either standing or seated. In most
decks, she is also shown between two pillars. She is
crowned, and in some decks wearing armor, in others
wearing robes. In one hand she holds a sword upright;
in the other, she holds scales in perfect balance.
49
50 • Tarot for Beginners
Meaning
This is divine justice as opposed to human justice
absolutely impartial and strictly fair. She stands in
direct contradiction to human justice which is
influenced by factors that make it imperfect. True
justice, divine justice, cannot be swayed by either
influence or personal preferences, or by the simple
limitations of human ability to judge between right and
wrong. That which should be, will be, and no one can
change it.
Her scales are absolutely in balance, and she sees
clearly what must be done. The sword in one hand and
the scales in the other symbolize the dual nature of
Justice: accuracy and severity.
In this stage of your spiritual development, this is
the type of vision that is required of you to learn as an
initiate. To pass through these portals you must learn to
look outward at the world and inward at yourself
without bias, with your eyes open, seeing only and
precisely what is there, rather than what you want to see,
or hope to see, and judging it only and exactly for what it
truly is.
Trumps Eight · 51
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): Equity. Victory of the right in
general; also, triumph for the deserving side in legal
matters. Ability to judge without being swayed by
personal considerations or bias. Fairness, reasonableness,
proper balance. Impartiality. This card also indicates (and
sometimes influences) lawsuits and legal matters.
Reversed (or Negative): Bigotry, inequality, bias.
Abuse of justice, complications in legal affairs. Unfair
punishment; excessive severity.
This is Justice as an ideal-to do what is right
despite opposition, or personal inclination, or the
vagaries of human law. If this card represents a
situation, you will get what you deserve; the outcome
will be what is strictly fair and absolutely right under
the circumstances. If this card represents the querent,
then your perception of the situation in which you find
yourself, or of the people you're dealing with, is ab
solutely accurate. You have made, or are capable of
making, the correct decision here. Don't let anyone
convince you otherwise.
��
The imagery here is
of a search, done
alone, and requiring
light (the lantern
representing
understanding or
knowledge) to discover
its goal.
�--�
THE
��
Trumps Nine
THE HERMIT
Represents
Self-examination. A vision quest.
Description
An old man, usually bearded, dressed in robes. The
robes here, however, are very plain and unadorned,
though they may also hint at the deck's religious affilia
tion: Egyptian or Old Testament garments, medieval
monk's robes in some decks, in others the kind worn in
Wiccan Circle. The robe is often hooded and may be
bound at the waist by a knotted cord.
The Hermit is always standing; in most decks, he
is also walking. Any background shows desert or other
53
54 · Tarot for Beginners
Meaning
Almost all religions have their own legends of a vision
quest, or of a great teacher or prophet who searches the
world seeking truth-or God.
The Hermit teaches that there comes a point in
your spiritual self-development when you must with
draw from the temptations and demands of civilization
and go out into the desert to search your soul for the
meaning of your own existence-and to find your God.
The Deity cannot speak clearly to you when you're dis
tracted by the demands of day-to-day existence. The
search for truth must be pursued alone.
This is as much a search for Self as for God, but the
imagery suggests that you will receive divine inspira
tion in your search, if it is an honest one. The lantern
represents your own knowledge and understanding,
which you must use to light your way in your search .
The staff may be understood to represent God, a
strength you can lean on to keep you steady throughout
your search, and protection against enemies you may
Trumps Nine • 55
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): Self-examination, moderation,
wisdom, silence. Hidden truth. Prudence, withdrawal,
circumspection, caution, solitude. Learning through
experience; a seeker. May also foretell an upcoming
journey.
Reversed (or Negative): Deception, lies, misinfor
mation. Corruption, concealment. Misguided ideals.
Disguise or even fraud.
As Arcanum Eight depicts Justice in its pure form,
Arcanum Nine is a search for truth in its pure form,
uncorrupted by ideologies, preferences, or needs. If this
card represents the querent, then you are going
through, or are about to undergo, a period of self
examination. This will be a time when you re-evaluate
your life, your associations, and your goals. The possi
ble changes that this will create in your life (and/ or
possible conclusions you may arrive at) will be sug
gested by the other cards in the reading.
��
The Wheel of Fortune
teaches you that there
are things in life that
just happen, and over
which not you, and not
even Blind Fate herself,
have any real control.
�··�
WHEEL o1 FORTUNE.
��
Trumps Ten
�--�
THE WHEEL OF
FORTUNE
Represents
Chance. Blind fate. A situation over which you have
no control.
Description
Most decks show a wheel whose axle is supported by
two uprights; in some decks, the wheel is at the edge of
a cliff. There are generally three figures on the wheel or
bound to it; one at the top, one ascending the wheel,
one descending. In some decks, the descending figure is
57
58 • Tarot for Beginners
falling off the wheel, usually over the cliff. The figures
on the wheel may be either human or animal; if animal,
they have some kind of symbolic form, such as a sphinx,
or clothed, monkey-like beings. The figure at the top of
the wheel is depicted as significant in some way
crowned, or bearing a sword, or evidently celebrating.
In some decks the wheel stands alone, though it is
obviously turning. In others, a blindfolded young
woman is turning the wheel. Note that none of the fig
ures on the wheel are aware of her, even the one who is
falling. In fact, no one, including the blindfolded
woman, is watching or really consciously controlling
the results of the wheel's turns. In a few decks, the
wheel is simply a disc suspended in the sky, with letters
or symbols written around it. In these decks, in addition
to the three figures bound to the wheel, there are also
four symbolic figures in each of the corners of the card:
at the top a human and a bird or griffin, at the bottom a
lion and a bull. All four figures are winged.
Meaning
We are all bound to the Wheel of Fortune. Some of us
are fighting our way upward; some of us fall by the
wayside. Some sit on top of the heap, apparently unaf
fected by the vagaries of fortune. But the wheel is turn
ing for everyone, whether or not we are aware of it.
What results for everyone is pure chance, and has noth
ing to do with individual worth, or lack of it. The mes
sage here is in direct contrast to Justice (Arcanum
Eight). In both cards, each individual is treated with
strict impartiality. In Justice, however, the result is fair:
you get what you deserve. In Fortune, you get whatever
Trumps Ten • 59
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): Good luck. Destiny; fortune. Suc
cess. An unexpected turn of events. Promotion or eleva
tion. Victory; obstacles overcome by good fortune.
Reversed (or Negative): Surplus of acquisitions,
dragging at your coat tails. Failure. Bad luck, problems,
unexpected harm.
60 · Tarot for Beginners
�··�
S TRENGTH .
��
Trumps Eleven
STRENGTH
Represents
Overcoming obstacles. Spiritual strength and force of
will. Victory over overwhelming odds.
Description
Many decks show a young woman wrestling with a
lion; she is fighting bare-handed and winning. In some
decks it appears that she is closing the lion's mouth; in
others, she is pulling its jaws apart.
63
64 · Tarot for Beginners
Meaning
This card symbolizes the inner strength required to
overcome obstacles placed in your path. Brute force is
not conquered by brute force; rather, it is spiritual
strength that overcomes physical strength. In almost all
the legends of humans overcoming some powerful
beast, be it a lion or a dragon, or anything else, victory
is won by right, not by might-by the individual's inner
fortitude and trust in God.
The beast in this case may represent external obsta
cles to your spiritual progress. It also represents the
beast within, however, your own fears and passions,
Trumps Eleven • 65
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): Force of will, moral strength. Per
sonal vitality. Courage, triumph. Fortitude, determina
tion, energy, defiance. Ability to endure hardship.
Success.
Reversed (or Negative): Abuse of power, despo
tism. Failure, disgrace. Weakness (either physical or
spiritual), discord, lack of harmony.
You are facing a test of your endurance. If your will
is stronger than whatever opponent you battle, you will
survive and succeed. If not, your dreams end here. Forti
tude is your key to victory; do not despair. If this card rep
resents the querent, then you are facing a test of your own
determination and will. The battle will not be an easy one,
but you can win if you make up your mind to see this
through. You will lose only if you choose to surrender.
� .@;,
.
�··�
Represents
Self-sacrifice, with the object of attaining wisdom, spe
cial insights, or personal growth.
Description
A male figure hanging upside down from a kind of gal
lows. Sometimes two uprights are shown on either side
of the figure, supporting the beam from which he
hangs, a repetition of the theme of the two pillars, or
doorway. Just as often, only the horizontal beam itself is
shown. Note that if two uprights are shown, they are
trimmed trees with roots in the living earth; if only the
horizontal is shown, it has leaves at various points
67
68 · Tarot for Beginners
Meaning
As with the Hermit (Arcanum Nine), many religions
and myths describe a divine or semi-divine figure who
chose to endure some form of personal sacrifice in order
to attain divine wisdom or even godhood . In Norse
myth, for example, Odin, ruler of the gods, hung for
nine days and nights from the sacred tree, Y ggdrasil, to
attain the wisdom of the runes. In the case of the Her
mit, seeking in solitude is the means to understanding
your goal; in The Hanged Man, the message i� that per
sonal sacrifice is required of you in order to attain it.
The Hanged Man is not being sacrificed by or for
others. The choice is his, and so are the rewards; that is
the message here. There are goals for which you must
perform some kind of personal sacrifice, that is, for
which you must endure an uncomfortable or unpleasant
experience . If you do, the benefits to you personally are
well worth the price . (If others happen to benefit too, as
Trumps Twelve • 69
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): Self-sacrifice, growth of wisdom,
intuition. Devotion, surrender, renunciation. Giving
something up for the sake of something better. Prophecy.
Reversed (or Negative): Selfishness, self-interest.
Political machinations. Petty sacrifices, lack of ties. May
mean a loss of something you want or need.
The Hanged Man requires that you be willing to
suffer some loss or surrender some pleasure in order to
attain your goal. The greater the goal, the greater the
sacrifice required to win it. If this card represents the
querent, you are going to have to pay-and pay
dearly-for whatever it is that you want. If you're will
ing to pay the price, you can attain your goal . Just
remind yourself throughout this difficult time that the
choice is yours: pay the price, or sacrifice the goal .
��
Death symbolizes a
complete severence
with the past; the
ending ofyour life
as it was.
IKU
Trumps Thirteen
DEATH
Represents
Abrupt change; an end to things as they are or were.
Death.
Description
In many decks, Death is pictured traditionally as a
skeleton with a scythe. In some decks, Death may be
depicted as a skeleton in black armor, riding a horse.
The figure is sometimes grinning, sometimes appearing
angry or vengeful.
Background also varies. Sometimes the ground is
sparse and bare, as though the earth itself is dead. Other
decks show parts of bodies: heads, hands, feet, and
71
72 • Tarot for Beginners
Meaning
Death symbolizes a complete severance with the past,
the ending of your life as it was. It can be interpreted as
giving up old ideas, and old ways of acting. It can also
be interpreted as a complete change in your life or
lifestyle, a crossing over from one mode of existence to
another. It also represents the end of close associations,
either because you move on or others do.
Death's sickle symbolizes reaping; you have sown
your seed, it has grown to this point, and now it is time
for the harvest. You take what you have learned and
move on to the next (and, if you've learned what you
should, higher) stage of existence.
In any case, there is an actual death here, but with
it the beginning of a new life. The Death card allegorizes
the end of the person you were, but this is not some
thing to fear. It's something you've earned; in fact, it is
something you've worked for. The end of who and what •
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): Sudden change; an end to things
as they were. Mortality; inevitability. A situation or
event that cannot be avoided. May mean actual death,
your own or that of someone close to you, or sudden
collapse of your plans. Failure.
Reversed (or Negative): Destruction, loss, failure
of plans. Apathy, loss of hope or faith. Changes for the
worse (though not necessarily fatal).
A major change is about to happen in your life.
Whatever it is, good or bad, it cannot be avoided. Note
that while this card represents a positive transformation
in the stages of spiritual enlightenment, in a reading, it
is a very unfavorable card.
If this card represents the querent, you are facing a
complete break with your old life, and there is little or
nothing you can do to stop it . Be sure to interpret the
other cards in your reading carefully to determine
exactly what that change is. It can mean anything from
material change, such as divorce or loss of a job, to
actual death. If the change is in your material status or
relationships, being prepared may help you salvage
something, or at least go on from there. If this card pre
dicts your own death, or that of someone close to you,
the other cards will tell you how and why it will come.
There may be something you can do to prevent it (as in
avoiding a deadly situation, or anticipating a potential
suicide). Or it may simply mean that you can only
accept and prepare for the inevitable.
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Trumps Fourteen
TEMPERANCE
Represents
Patience, self-control, willingness to learn understanding.
Description
A winged angel stands by a stream. In some decks, the
figure has one foot in the stream and one on the shore.
The angel may be either male or female; it's not always
possible to tell, nor does it matter. Some decks show the
angel with a halo and/ or a crown, or some form of
symbolic disc worn on the forehead.
The angel holds two cups or pitchers, one in each
hand, and is pouring liquid, probably water, from one
to the other. The background shows countryside and
75
76 · Tarot for Beginners
Meaning
The lesson this card teaches is among the most impor
tant-and probably the most difficult-of lessons you
need to learn: patience. There are times in your life
when it seems like nothing is happening, nothing is
moving; you've come to a standstill, and there's noth
ing you can do about it.
This is not a matter of someone or something
deliberately holding you up. It is a necessary waiting
period, and though it may seem like a delay, things are
happening. To use a very mundane example: Once
you've made your batter, poured it in the pan and put it
in the oven, you have to wait until it's baked. It does no
good to pace up and down and frustrate yourself. There •
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): Patience, accommodation, mod
eration, frugality, temperance, reflection. Diplomacy;
impartiality. Good management; economy. Ability to
coordinate.
Reversed (or Negative): Disunion, lack of har
mony. Competing interests; unfortunate combinations
or alliances (such as socially unacceptable marriages or
partnerships). Frustration, impatience.
Even though it seems you are stalled, things are
proceeding toward their proper ends and will arrive in
their proper time. Don't push it. There's nothing you
can do right now. If this card represents the querent and
you are impatient for results, the message is the same. If
you are sitting back and waiting for results, then you're
doing exactly the right thing. In fact, you're doing the
only thing possible in this situation.
The allegory here is not
independent will, but
of an intelligence that
works to destroy for the
sake of upsetting the
divine balance.
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Trumps Fifteen
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THE DEVIL
Represents
The struggle between the supreme good and the supreme
evil; a choice or conflict between order and chaos.
Description
Some decks show a traditional devil, complete with
horns, hooves, tail and pitchfork. In these, he is shown
exalting over a single weeping figure; his stance, with
one arm raised like a puppet master, parodies the
standing figure of the High Priestess.
Most decks show a larger devil with two smaller
figures, male and female, standing at the foot of his
79
80 • Tarot for Beginners
Meaning
The Devil represents the antithesis of good, the forces that
strive to upset the harmonious order of existence. It is not
simply being an individualist, or wanting his own way,
that makes this being evil. The Magician (Arcanum One)
also tries to impose his own will on the universe, and, in
fact, one of the results of completing the Path of the Tarot
is to enable you to truly control your own destiny.
The allegory here is not independent will, but of
an intelligence that works to destroy for the sake of
upsetting the divine balance. His purpose is to defeat
Divine Law and return the world to a state of chaos.
The ancients taught that there is an order to the
universe, within which all living beings could find their
own best destiny. Divine Law seeks to establish and
maintain that order; The Devil works to upset and
undermine it. He may operate as a tempter, or he may
command by fear, but either way his purpose is to offer
irresistible inducements to stray from the true path.
The True Path, as taught by the Tarot, is to become
as close to the divine as possible. At this stage in your
spiritual development you have become adept enough
to be a valuable servant for the forces of evil. This is the
point at which you can chose either to continue toward
your ultimate goal, or take the left-hand path, which
ends here. The inducements are especially tempting to
the seeker at this time. You've just been forced to wait
for fulfillment of your purpose(s) (Temperance). The
Devil seems to offer a way to achieve those purposes
without any more waiting, or any further work.
The power offered is tremendous, but the price
demanded is even greater. Never forget that you can
82 · Tarot for Beginners
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): Hatred, violence, destruction.
Turmoil, fatality, bad luck. Willing bondage. Your own
authority and will removed and given to another. Also,
that which is predestined and therefore unescapable,
but not for that reason necessarily evil.
Reversed (or Negative): Pettiness, weakness.
Blindness, jealousy, illness. Evil fate. Wrong choices.
Disaster for you which benefits others.
You're being offered a quick fix for your problems.
If you are impatient enough to take it, you may see the
destruction of all your dreams and plans. You can suc
ceed on your own. Don't be tempted by shortcuts, how
ever attractive; or dismayed by the hard work involved
if you continue alone.
If this card represents the querent, beware. The
power you are exercising over your subordinates is
heady, and you may find it satisfying to manipulate,
control, and even destroy their lives. But even the real
Devil has no place to go but down.
Trumps Fifteen 83
•
�1&;,.
This card represents
destruction resulting
directly from your own
lack of understanding
and good judgement,
and/or from the misuse
ofyour free will.
�--�
Represents
A setback; the ruin of all your plans; disaster resulting
from your own misuse of power or divine gifts.
Description
A stone fortress or tower; the top of it is sometimes shown
as a crown. The tower is being struck by lightning from
the heavens, which represents divine wrath. The top of
the tower is sheared off, and the tower itself is falling to
pieces. Debris and sparks are falling from the tower. The
illustration also shows two human figures, usually both
male, falling to their deaths from the top of the tower.
85
86 · Tarot for Beginners
Meaning
The most familiar story corresponding to the symbol
ism in this card is that of the Tower of Babel. The people
of Babel came very close to accomplishing what could
be humanity's greatest goal: a complete unity of pur
pose. They all spoke one language; they all worked
together to accomplish one end. The result of their
cooperation was that their work was destroyed, their
language was confused, and they were scattered to the
four corners of the earth.
It's important to understand that it was not the
actual building of the tower that was wrong; and cer
tainly not the fact that they cooperated in building it.
Where they erred was in the reason the tower was built.
Rather than using their united strength to reach toward
the divine in themselves, they used it to challenge God
and to attempt to rule the earth in God's stead.
This card follows from Arcanum Fifteen (The
Devil). The purpose of your path toward spiritual self
enlightenment is to become like God. But, says the
Tarot, you don't become like God simply by having
power over the material plane. If you are tempted by
the possibilities in controlling this world instead of
striving for wisdom and spiritual growth, you will lose
all you gained. The reason for the disaster is not
because you developed great powers, but because you
misused them. It is destruction resulting directly from
Trumps Sixteen · 87
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): Disruption, adversity, calamity,
misery, deception. Unforeseen ruin, termination. Dis
grace, misery. A financial or personal loss, such as the
destruction of your home or business, the breakup of a
marriage or relationship, any disastrous change in your
personal or financial affairs; in particular, an unforeseen
catastrophe.
Reversed (or Negative): Still foretells calamities
and losses, but of a lesser importance in your life; they
will disrupt your life while they're going on, but they
don't mean the end of everything you've built. A sud
den, unexpected change. Oppression, adversity, decep
tion, tyranny.
That which you have built is ending in disaster. In
most cases, these disasters could have been prevented
had you acted wisely to begin with. If you act wisely
now, you may be able to alleviate at least some of the
problems about to occur.
If this card represents the querent, you've over
stepped yourself and are about to pay the price. But
even in this case, it is not a punishment for hubris. It is
disaster resulting from the fact that you believed you
had powers or authority that in fact you don't, or
because you used your powers or authority unwisely or
for the wrong reasons. In simple terms: you blew it, and
your resulting downfall is your own fault.
Trumps Sixteen • 89
.,:�H�
The allegory of the
Star card is not of
simple patience, but
ofputting back
something ofyourself,
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Trumps Seventeen
THE STAR
Represents
Wisdom, immortality, accomplishment of your goals,
generosity and understanding.
Description
A female figure kneels on one knee at the edge of a
stream. In most decks, her knee is on the land and her
other foot is in the stream. She is holding two pitchers,
one in each hand, from which she is emptying the water.
In all decks, she is pouring water from at least one of
those pitchers back into the stream; in many decks, the
water from the second pitcher is being poured onto the
ground beside the stream, and only some of it returns to
91
92 · Tarot for Beginners
Meaning
Consider the imagery of the stars. From earliest times,
people have been fascinated and guided by these signs
in the heavens. Astrology teaches that the positions of
the stars influences our lives, but even those with no
knowledge of Astrology pay heed to these distant bea
cons. Travelers use the North Star (or, below the equator,
Trumps Seventeen · 93
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): Wisdom, immortality, spiritual
enlightenment. Hope, happiness, intellectual fulfillment.
Satisfaction, hope, bright prospects, destiny, insight.
Progress toward your goals; understanding of what
those goals should be.
Reversed (or Negative): Frustration, impotence, theft.
Unfulfilled expectations, disappointments, abandonment.
Arrogance leading to losses instead of gains.
You have found the path which will enable you to
achieve your own form of immortality, however you
may define it. Use your power wisely, serene in the
knowledge that that which you seek is within your
grasp. If this card represents the querent, what you
have or are about to accomplish will enable you to
make your mark on the world. You need no longer fear
any rivals; no one has the ability or even potential to
Trumps Seventeen • 95
take this success from you. If you are wise and gener
ous, you will also realize that you can increase your
influence and the memory of your name by teaching at
least some of what you have learned to others.
��
The Moon tells you
that you want to
learn to shape events,
not be shaped by
them.
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THE MOON .
��
Trumps Eighteen
THE MOON
Represents
Mystery, intuition, psychic ability, deception and danger.
Description
This is usually a divided card. The upper half shows the
moon at top center. It is within a full circle, but the
moon is actually a crescent, increasing to what is called
the "side of mercy" (to the right of the observer); in
effect, the moon is shown in both its crescent and full
form. There is a face in the moon, on the left side of the
crescent, looking down at the scene below. In some
decks, the full circle is rayed; where there are rays
around the moon, there are usually also water-drop
97
98 · Tarot for Beginners
Meaning
There is tremendous power to be gained here, but there
is also a danger of which the seeker must always be
aware. The Moon represents the lure of the unknown,
hidden knowledge, truth obscured. A lack of complete
information causes misunderstanding and conflicts,
and makes it difficult if not impossible to arrive at cor
rect conclusions. Be sure you understand exactly what
you want and what you're doing before making your
next move. Also be aware that the word "lunacy"
comes from the word for moon, luna: there is the danger
here of madness, desperation, even suicidal tendencies.
All these things can interfere with your search for the
hidden knowledge and power which is also contained
in all aspects of The Moon.
The Moon has a magnetism which attracts and
controls. It speaks to our animal nature, and draws on
the subconscious, inducing volition without conscious
thought. The only way to avoid its dangerous aspects is
to deliberately assume conscious control: you must
resist its pull and retain your own control. In short, to
avoid the dangers in this card, you must learn to use
your mind, your conscious intelligence, at all times. You
may not surrender to your instincts; you dare not give
in to your emotions. You are learning, in the paths of
the Tarot, to draw on your subconscious and develop
your psychic abilities. But this is the point at which you
must put those abilities under conscious control. What
differentiates people from animals (which are affected
100 · Tarot for Beginners
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): Caution, hidden danger, hidden
enemies. Scandal, error, disillusionment, deception,
strife. Also: intuition, latent psychic abilities possessed
by the querent, occult forces in operation around you.
,
Reversed (or Negative): Deception and danger to a
lesser degree of importance. Instability, unimportant
errors, silence.
There are hidden forces of tremendous power
operating around you. You may not be able to control
them, but you can avoid being controlled by them.
Watch your step.
If this card represents the querent, then you are
being told that, whether or not you are aware of it, you
possess tremendous psychic ability, most of it latent. Up
until now, you have probably made little or no use of
this ability. This is the best time for you to develop and
learn to control it; you will need it in the times ahead.
But act wisely. Either your misuse of this ability, or your
refusal to use it at all, can lead you dangerously astray.
Trumps Eighteen · 101
The Sun card
symbolizes the
transition between the
visible light of this
world, and the
spiritual light of the
world for which you are
striving.
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��
Trumps Nineteen
�--�
THE SUN
Represents
Happiness, contentment, success. Fulfillment. Gifts
received.
Description
At the center top of the picture is a large sun, usually
with a face looking out at the observer and always with
beams radiating out from it. Some decks also show
droplets raining down. Just as in The Moon card, this
shows the descent of spirit into matter.
The scene below varies. Some decks show two
young children, seated with their arms around each
other, or a young male and female couple standing in a
103
104 • Tarot for Beginners
Meaning
The Moon shines with reflected light, and not enough
light to illuminate hidden knowledge. But the Sun,
however, is the source of light, bringing brightness and
warmth, illuminating understanding, giving compre
hension, clarity, and happiness.
Halfway between Heaven and Earth, The Sun
serves as the mediator between God and humanity. It is
at the same time the lowest aspect of the divine, and the
highest aspect of the mundane. The Sun card
symbolizes the transition between the visible light of
this world and the spiritual light of the world for which
you are striving. If you can approach the gifts it offers
with the heart of a child-which has its own wisdom in
innocence, simplicity and simple enjoyment of life
you take your next step toward the divine.
Trumps Nineteen · 105
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): Triumph, success� happiness,
accomplishment, contentment. Achievement; success
and honors. A new beginning, a birth (as of a child, a
project, an idea, a career). Material blessings, a joining
(such as marriage) which will be happy.
Reversed (or Negative): All the same things, but to
a lesser degree. This is never a negative card.
You can see your way clearly now. That which you
have worked so hard for is about to come to fruition.
You may even receive gifts which you haven't earned
and perhaps didn't even expect.
106 · Tarot for Beginners
THE SUN •
��
Judgement symbolizes
the end ofyour old
life and the begin
ning of a new one,
but in this case,
whatever change is
about to happen will
be for the better.
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Trumps Twenty
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JUDGEMENT
Represents
Final decisions made; a new life beginning; results, out
comes, conclusions. The end of your doubts; answers to
your questions.
Description
At the top of the picture a divine figure, usually repre
sented as a winged angel, leans down from a cloud,
blowing on a trumpet. Below, nude human figures rise
out of coffins or out of the earth itself, their faces
expressing wonder and awe.
109
110 • Tarot for Beginners
Meaning
Like the Death card, Judgement symbolizes the end of
your old life and the beginning of a new one. But in this
case, whatever change is about to happen will be for the
better. Your questions will be answered; your doubts
resolved. You will know the truth at last.
These answers may happen on either the spiritual
or the mundane plane of your life. On the mundane, for
example, it may be that you can expect a new career, a
new romance, a change for the better in your general
lifestyle.
Trumps Twenty · Ill
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): Determination, decision, result,
outcome. An introduction; a fresh start, a new begin
ning. Expect news, an important announcement, which
will positively affect your progress. Problems resolved;
questions answered. Change, rebirth, renewal: a radical
but positive change in your life or circumstances.
Reversed (or Negative): Delay, deliberation, results
postponed, weakness, cowardice. Also possibly punish
ment for any or all of these traits.
112 · Tarot for Beginners
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Trumps Twenty-One
THE WORLD
Represents
Perfection, attainment. Your goals have been reached,
your development or learning (in this area) is completed.
115
ll6 · Tarot for Beginners
Description
In almost all decks, the central figure is a young nude
woman, draped modestly with a long flowing scarf. She
is surrounded by a wreath, made of either leaves, or
leaves and flowers. In some decks, she is holding
wands or staffs in both hands. The position of her
hands varies; but a few decks show her gesturing in the
same manner as The Magician: one hand upward, the
other pointing down.
At the four comers of the card there are four differ
ent figures: upper left, a winged human or angel, upper
. right a hawk or eagle, lower left a bull, lower right a lion.
Some decks show only the faces of these four figures; oth
ers show enough of the figures so that you can see that all
four have wings. Note that the positioning of these four
figures is similar to those sometimes found in Arcanum
Ten (The Wheel of Fortune).
Meaning
This is the last numbered card of the Major Arcana. In
this representation, you are the adept you have tried to
become throughout your journey. Your transmutation
(shown in the previous card, Judgement) is complete,
and you have achieved the perfect synthesis of body
(material), mind (intelligence), soul (self-awareness),
and spirit (subconscious).
The World symbolizes complete mastery and under
standing of your own inner nature and of the forces sur
rounding you. You know what is good and right in the
universe and understand its intended order. And you can
trust your judgement regarding what actions to take in
Trumps Twenty-One • 117
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): Completion, perfection, synthesis,
ultimate change. Honesty and truth; assured success,
harmony, attainment. Graduation; completion of a
cycle. Recognition, reward, acclaim.
Reversed (or Negative): Negation, sacrifice of
love or goals. Flight. Stagnation, inertia. Payback for
evil deeds.
You have learned the lessons required for this incar
nation (or situation, if the question involves mundane
things). You are what you need to be; you know all you
need to know; you have accomplished all you need to
accomplish. You can now go on to other things, knowing
that this task has been completed to perfection.
118 • Tarot for Beginners
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Trumps Zero
THE FOOL
121
122 • Tarot for Beginners
Represents
Unavoidable mistakes, due to your own (often deliber
ate) ignorance. Complete folly.
Description
A male figure stands at the edge of a cliff. He is walking
toward the edge of the cliff, but not watching where he
is going. He may be either looking back over his shoul
der or staring up into the sky, but while his next step
will take him over the edge of the cliff, he is totally
unaware of his danger.
In some decks, The Fool is dressed in the parti-col
ored costume and cap and bells of a court jester; in oth
ers, he's wearing the plain and sometimes travel-worn
costume of a wanderer. In most decks, The Fool carries
a hobo's sack on a stick over one shoulder, and may or
may not be leaning on a traveler 's staff (like The Her
mit, Arcanum Nine). Many decks also show a small dog
in the picture, raised up on its hind legs and either bark
ing at the figure, or actually grabbing at his clothes with
its teeth to pull him back. Whatever the case, the dog is
attempting to give The Fool warning of his danger. The
Fool is so involved in his own thoughts, however, that
he is paying no attention to the warning either.
It is important to note that it's not always clear, in
this card, if the young man is actually a fool and about
to take this dangerous step without knowing what he's
doing, or if he is in fact aware of his danger and simply
has no fear of it. In either case, the step he is about to
take is a very drastic one.
The point to remember is that his folly is deliber
ate. Even starting the Path of the Tarot requires a blind
Trumps Zero • 123
Meaning
Don't underestimate The Fool. He may appear to be a
ridiculous figure. But you need to understand the les
son he teaches.
The overt symbolism in this card is of unmitigated
folly. Like The Hermit (Arcanum Nine), The Fool is a
traveler. But rather than using his own intelligence, or
any other aid, to light his way, he is deliberately refus
ing to watch where he's going.
Note also the imagery relative to Arcanum Ten (The
Wheel of Fortune). Like the figure falling off the Wheel,
The Fool is headed over the edge of a cliff; but where in
that case it is blind and uncaring Fate that causes that
disaster, in this case, it is your own blind folly.
In mundane terms, The Fool describes the individ
ual who is so determined to travel down a particular
road no matter what that he is going out of his way to
ignore all warning signs, or even watch his step. With
that attitude, says Arcanum Zero, it is inevitable that you
will walk blindly into making a really stupid mistake.
In terms of your personal development, The Fool
tells you that you are missing the point-and in fact
walking into very great danger because of it-simply
because you refuse to see the truth which is right in
front of you.
However, in terms of your progress through the
Path of the Tarot, there are two possible interpretations
for this card. If The Fool does in fact belong at the
beginning of the Major Arcana, then the message is that
124 · Tarot for Beginners
you are a fool because you have not yet started your
progress toward spiritual self-enlightenment. Without
the understanding that such a study brings, you walk
blindly through life, missing all the important signs and
warnings, missing the point of life at all. Further,
should you attempt to walk this road without watching
where you're going (i.e.: to use the skills of an adept
without understanding where they can lead you), you
could be headed for the ultimate disaster.
But if The Fool belongs here, at the end, then per
haps this figure is not, after all, such a fool as he seems.
It may simply be that you must make a blind leap of
faith to achieve the final step in your path to enlighten
ment, frightening though it may be. And though it may
appear to the observer that you are walking blindly
toward your doom, perhaps what you are really head
ing for is a transformation so far outside the limits of
this world that it cannot be imagined even by the most
accomplished adept.
I leave it to you to decide for yourself if The Fool is
simply someone too stupid to watch where he's going,
and who is therefore headed for disaster. Or if he is
someone whose faith is so great that he is willing to take
a major step without questioning where it may lead him.
Either way, he's walking blindly to his fate. Arcanum
Zero asks if you would-or could-do the same.
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): Folly, thoughtlessness, extrava
gance, lack of discipline, delirium, frenzy.
Reversed (or Negative): Carelessness, negligence,
apathy. Hesitation, instability.
Trumps Zero · 125
There is even more that you can learn from and accom
plish with the Major Arcana than I've covered here, or
that can be covered in a book of this nature. Before mov
ing on, however, let's take at least a brief look at one of
the ways you can make practical use of these cards.
Spiritual progress is important, but you have to
live in this world, too. As you may have already con
cluded on your own by this point, it is possible to use
the Major Arcana for temporal personal progress as
well as spiritual. To accomplish this, you need to select
the appropriate card for your purpose. Then you use its
imagery to create changes in yourself that will enable
you to cope better and function more effectively in your
day-to-day life.
127
128 · Tarot for Beginners
INTRODUCTION
133
134 · Tarot for Beginners
INTERPRETATION
151
152 · Tarot for Beginners
Getting Started
Since this is a beginner's text, it would not be helpful to
simply give you yet another list of interpretations, with
out at least some reference to what you'll find in other
sources. What I've done, therefore, is to survey a num
ber of sources on the Tarot, both texts and expert read
ers, to find out where they agree and where they don't.
After some consultation (and not a little bit of argu
ment), I selected those interpretations on which most of
my sources agree, eliminating any definitions which
vary widely (though they, too, may possibly have been
accurate in some circumstances).
I have not, of course, included all sources on the
Tarot in this research. But the list of meanings provided
for each card does give you a kind of summary of those
definitions which many readers and researchers of the
Tarot (including myself) have found to be accurate and
workable. You'll find this list of definitions under the
heading "In the Reading" for each card.
But that still leaves you with just a long list of
words and phrases. How do you make a choice as to
which definition applies in a given reading? How do
you even know what these definitions are intended to
mean in the first place?
For the Major Arcana, you at least have a sound
understanding of what each card means in its own
right. That's enough to help you adjust the divinatory
Minor Arcana: Interpretation · 153
By the Numbers
You don't have to know a lot about numerology to use
it as a guide to interpreting the pip cards of the Minor
Arcana. All you need are the cyclical meanings of the
numbers. This will give you, for each card, a picture of
the events taking place or the situation which is cur
rently in the process of playing itself out. It will also tell
you what stage of the game you're at, how far along
this series of events has progressed, and, therefore, how
deeply involved the querent is at this point in time.
The suit of the card will tell you the nature of the
situation: what kind of forces, attitudes, or needs are
controlling or defining this series of events. Add the
two together, and you have a workable interpretation of
the card.
ONE is the number of beginnings, of original
action, or of creativity. If the Ace in your reading is
upright, or the reading is generally favorable, then the
beginning in question will be auspicious. If the card is
reversed (or the reading unfavorable), then the series of
events now beginning-or their results, if nothing is
done about it-will be unfortunate.
TWO is the number of union, imagination, and
conception. In a reading, the deuce indicates that some
new factor is about to be introduced into the current sit
uation-another person, an event, a circumstance-
Minor Arcana: Interpretation · 155
tell you whether it's better or worse that you can expect.
FIVE is the number of movement, excitement, and
adventure. While this may seem to be an advantageous
indicator, never forget there is also an old curse which
states: "May you live in interesting times." People who
get drafted into the military during a war also have
excitement and adventure, but it is unquestionably of a
type they could do without! If a FIVE card adds favor
able indications to a reading, then your plans are mov
ing toward a particularly exciting result, and/ or you can
expect to really enjoy upcoming situations and events. If
unfavorable, then you can expect upheaval and disor
der, and even ruin of everything you've worked for.
SIX is the number of harmony, of balance and
adjustment, of quiet circumstances and activities. It is
also the number of love and romance. In a favorable
reading, it means you can expect a bit of peace after all
the activity and excitement. Misunderstandings can or
will be cleared up at this time, either between people or
within your own mind. In effect, you have a chance to
stop and catch your breath. You made your plans, you
took your chances; now you can tie it all together in a
coherent state. If the card or reading is unfavorable,
however, there are still some rocky shoals ahead. Fortu
nately, SIX indicators are never as unfavorable as other
cards. But the circumstances you face can still, nonethe
less, be very uncomfortable.
SEVEN is the number of solitude, and of soul
searching. This need not necessarily be on the spiritual
level; you can search your soul with psychoanalysis, too!
However, it indicates a period when you'll find it neces
sary to seriously consider how and why specific events
come to pass. If the reading is favorable, that course of
events could be almost miraculous, and you may have
Minor Arcana: Interpretation · 157
165
166 · Tarot for Beginners
KING OF
SWORDS
The King of
Swords represents
a man ofpower
and authority, or
a situation that is
potentially
harmful.
KING o�SWORDS .
Description
Most decks show a mature man en garde on a throne or
chair. He is fully armored and wearing a helmet with a
crown atop it. He holds a sword upright in his right
hand; and his position seems to indicate that he's ready
at any time to stand up and attack. His expression is
grim and determined.
Meaning
The King of Swords is a man of authority and power,
often in his own right, and certainly in terms of the
querent's personal or professional life. He is someone
accustomed to giving orders and seeing to it that they
are obeyed. The querent will see him as someone whose
Swords • 169
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): A man of power, authority and
intelligence. A man in a position to issue and carry out
judgements; perhaps someone with legal authority or
political connections, etc. If the querent is male, the King
of Swords may represent an ambitious man who can and
will prove a dangerous rival, injuring either business or
personal relationships. If the querent is a woman, she is
warned not to get personally involved with this man: at
the least, he will be worthless or incompatible; at the
worst, potentially physically dangerous to her. The
accompanying cards will define the nature of the danger.
If the card does not represent a person, then the sit
uation itself is potentially harmful. Expect worry, grief,
chagrin, even physical danger.
Reversed (or Negative): An evil man, or one of
evil intent. Cruelty, perversity, barbarity. In effect, the
same power and authority, but definitely used with
intent to harm.
170 Tarot for Beginners
•
QUEEN OF
SWORDS
�l!�
The Queen of
Swords represents
a woman ofpower
and authority, or
a symbol of
personal loss,
emotionally
devastating
situations.
�{\�
Description
A mature woman, crowned and regally robed. She may
be either standing or seated on a throne. Like the King,
she holds a sword upright in her right hand. Her left
hand is usually raised in a gesture of judgement. Her
expression is intent and may be seen as either stern and
unyielding, or angry.
Meaning
Like the King, this is a woman of power and authority,
with the intent of using it to forward her own purposes.
She will be perceived by the querent as a woman who is
malicious, domineering, or selfishly spiteful. If this card
does not represent a person, it is a symbol of widow
hood, personal loss, emotionally devastating situations.
Swords • 171
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): A malicious, spiteful woman, and
one who is in a position to do you great harm. She is
both ruthless and cruel. If the querent is male, he is well
advised not to establish any kind of personal relation
ship with this woman if he can help it. If the querent is
female, the card is an indicator of betrayal by someone
she thought was a friend.
If this card does not represent a person, then the
indications are of bereavement and sadness, separation
and privation, widowhood and mourning.
Reversed (or Negative): An evil woman, with the
power to do harm and the evil intent as well. Malice,
bigotry, deceit. A situation which will cause you intense
unhappiness or, at the least, great embarrassment.
172 · Tarot for Beginners
KNIGHT OF
SWORDS
The Knight of
Swords represents
someone who will
undermine or hurt
you, or a warning of
enmity and
opposition.
�--�
Description
Most decks show a fully armored knight on a charging or
rearing horse. He is challenging or charging an attacker
or enemy; his expression is grim or even angry and indi
cates that he is determined to win in this confrontation.
He carries his sword raised high in attack position.
Meaning
The Knight of Swords is a younger man with the same
attributes as his symbolic parents; selfish, treacherous,
self-serving and cruel. Because he is younger, it may not
seem that he has the kind of power and authority
needed to do harm. But within his own sphere of influ
ence he does, and he is also likely to backed by others
Swords • 173
who can help him do even more harm (or escape the
consequences of the harm he does). This is someone
who is testing his ability to become what the King and
Queen already are, so he is likely to be less subtle and
more violent. A spy, an enemy, a bigot; someone who
will undermine or hurt the querent. If this card does not
represent a person, it does warn of enmity and opposi
tion. If neighboring cards in the reading are negative,
the Knight of Swords warns of destruction or death.
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): A treacherous young man. A false
friend. An individual who is clever and brave, and very
active in his own interests. He is prepared to ride down
anyone he sees as being in his way. He has distinct lead
ership qualities, and can convince others to follow him
(willingly or otherwise), which makes him all the more
dangerous to those he chooses to consider enemies.
Note that one of the things that makes him dangerous is
that even the querent may admire this person. It is best
that you oppose rather than follow him if you can; his
followers benefit no more than his enemies. If this card
does not describe an actual person, it predicts conflict,
opposition, and possibly destruction and death.
Reversed (or Negative): Wasteful extravagance.
Imprudence, incapacity, poor leadership. A foolish or
conceited person (or a warning against conceit or fool
ishness). Again, you are warned to watch your back;
you have an influential and dangerous enemy, or are in
a potentially explosive situation.
174 Tarot for Beginners
·
PAGE OF
SWORDS
�··�
Description
Most decks show a young man standing confidently,
holding a sword upright in his right hand. Sometimes
he holds the sword upright with both hands on the
pommel. He usually is not shown wearing armor, but is
well-dressed and often wears the same colors as the
Knight. Many decks attempt to depict a sense of self
importance in this figure; the Page also tends to be
somewhat effeminate. His attitude appears to be, in
many decks, that of someone who is looking for an
enemy, or expecting one to appear at any moment.
Meaning
A younger man or woman, less mature, but otherwise
with the same qualities as the other court cards. The
Page is not as powerful as the other court cards, but can
Swords • 175
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): A malicious, treacherous young
man or woman. Someone who will hurt (or try to hurt)
the querent out of envy or spite. If you are not their
enemy, they are perfectly capable of making you one,
whether or not you're aware of it (or do anything to
warrant it). If the card does not represent a person, then
beware of spying, malicious rumor, bad news coming
or received. May also indicate sickness.
Reversed (or Negative): The same bad intentions,
or bad news, intensified. Also, that they will happen
when you are least prepared, and from a direction least
expected.
ACE OF
SWORDS
�··�
Description
Most decks show a hand gripping an upright sword by
the hilt. Near the top of the illustration, around the
point of the sword, is a crown. Either the sword, or
crown, or both are decorated with some form of living
vines or branches, sometimes just with leaves, some
times with fruit or berries as well.
Meaning
A card of triumph, in an almost excessive degree. It car
ries with it the concept of triumph by force: physical
force, force of will, force of position or circumstances.
You start this cycle as king of the mountain: you've won
a tremendous victory or attained a high position, and
Swords · 1Tl
you are (or will soon be) feeling both the euphoria and
the power of your conquest. This is also a card of pros
perity and fertility. The triumph can refer to any area of
your life: profession, love, money, whatever endeavor
you were engaged in. In effect, in this suit you (seem
to!) start off where others finish: with what appears to
be, and perhaps is for now, all your goals achieved.
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): Triumph, prosperity, conquest,
fertility. A birth (of a child, or an idea, or a new
endeavor). Tremendous power used and/ or now avail
able, in any area you chose to use it, from love to hatred.
Extreme feelings, both regarding this situation and oth
ers around you; excess in everything connected to it.
You are riding high on the crest of the wave.
Reversed (or Negative): The same, but with disas
trous results for the querent. You have still won a great
victory, but you will very soon have reason to wish you
hadn't, if you don't already. The beginning of tense
relations and emotional conflicts with others and even
yourself.
178 Tarot for Beginners
·
TWO OF
SWORDS
c�n�
Meaning
A generally favorable card, indicating friendship and
union. An alliance with a comrade in arms to achieve a
mutual goal; or, at the least, the recognition that there is
a mutual goal to be attained. Care must still be taken,
though, since Swords are not generally a good sign in
human relationships and affairs; the friendship here is a
qualified one. Consider this more an alliance based on
mutual benefit to the querent and some other (person or
group). At best, the alliance can be maintained only so
long as the two of you don't get in each other's way; at
the least, impartiality on the part of a possible oppo
nent, or a possible stalemate which is being resolved by
a joining of forces. If the card is negative, beware
betrayal, either in this situation or in one to come.
Swords • 179
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): Friendship, union, alliance.
Courage, harmony, even intimacy. Impartiality rather
than open antagonism from a potential opponent, or a
possible stalemate (for the opponent) which leaves you
able to move. Or, opposition which will not last or is not
significant enough to impede you.
Reversed (or Negative): Deceit, disloyalty, false
hood, disorder. Imposture and duplicity on the part of a
seeming ally. Lies, treachery, dishonor.
180 Tarot for Beginners
·
THREE OF
SWORDS
��
The Three of
Swords indicates the
disintegration of
alliances.
�--�
Meaning
This is a card of severance, of separation. Alliances pre
viously established will disintegrate due to quarrels,
opposing interests, conflicts between the parties. It was
not a stable alliance to begin with, being based on self
ish interests for at least one if not both parties involved.
Now it's coming apart. Protect your interests in this
breakup, because that is what your former partner will
definitely be doing. You have to stay on top of things; it
will be a confusing and upsetting time, and things can
go very wrong as a result of this breakup if you don't
keep your head straight.
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): Separation, severance, removal,
divorce. Delays and ruptures in personal or business rela
tionships. Dispersion of property and power. Quarrels.
Swords · 181
FOUR OF
SWORDS
�.!e;
The Four of
Swords means
contemplation and
vigilance is needed,
or a period of
recuperation.
e:m··�
Meaning
You are going to have to work out your problems, and
plan your future actions, alone from here. You need
solitude and quiet; don't avoid it. This is a card of con
templation and vigilance; almost a hermit's retreat. It
also indicates a necessary period of recuperation from
the situation you just passed through. Take this time to
work things out on your own and plan more wisely.
Don't expect the highs you had up until now; as you've
seen, they proved themselves no good for you. If you
look for the same exaltation, you may find yourself in
the same unpleasant situation.
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): Solitude and quiet. Exile, retreat,
need to plan and think. Careful planning will bring sue-
Swords · 183
FIVE OF
SWORDS
Meaning
This is a card of ruin and misfortune. It foretells the
defeat of your plans, an unhappy or tragic situation,
and/ or great loss. Surrounding cards (ie: other events
or people) may mitigate these losses; but you are head
ing into some very bad times, and about all you can do
is try to get through them as best you can.
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): Sorrow, mourning, tragic situation.
Degradation, destruction, dishonor and loss in store for
the querent. Possible hidden dangers, as well as those
you can foresee. Discouragement and defeat.
Reversed (or Negative): The same. Your enemy
had been overcome for a time, but is now the winner.
Swords · 185
SIX OF
SWORDS
��
The Six of Swords
indicates a journey,
or visitor or
message.
Meaning
Here things begin to change, but whether for better or
worse is uncertain at this time. You may take a journey,
or receive a visitor or a message. Whatever happens,
you are slowly moving out of the bad situation in which
you recently found yourself. Note that some interpreta
tions of this card also include "a proposal of love":
either in a romantic sense, or in the sense of someone
offering you their genuine allegiance. If the travel is
actually from one physical place to another (as opposed
to a change in your mental or emotional orientation),
most interpretations agree that it will probably be by
(or, considering modern possibilities, over) water.
186 Tarot for Beginners
·
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): A journey whose destination is
uncertain. A change of unknown effect. A message
received. Escape; reprieve. The change may possibly
render your enemy harmless. Sometimes this card
brings luck despite earlier failures.
Reversed (or Negative): A confession, a declara
tion. Perhaps a proposal of love. In any case, a surprise.
Swords · 187
SEVEN OF
SWORDS
The Seven of
Swords means
hope and renewed
confidence.
Meaning
This is a card of hope and renewed confidence. The
worst seems to be over. If you base your confidence,
and your plans, on your understanding of and experi
ence with the situation, you may yet succeed. Be careful
of overconfidence, and don't try to bluff. Your experi
ences have taught you what you need to know and your
own strengths can carry you through. There's no need to
push beyond that. Don't talk too much about what you
need or plan to do; babbling will only aid your enemies.
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): Hope and confidence. New
attempts at overcoming previous failures which may
very well succeed at this time. Possibly good advice
(either your own or from some other source); instruc
tion you can use to straighten things out.
188 Tarot for Beginners
•
EIGHT OF
SWORDS
��
Meaning
Another negative and dangerous card. In this case, you
are warned of general and perhaps unexpected calami
ties, such as sickness or injury. You may also receive bad
news, or take losses. You still have enemies out there,
and they are still trying to defeat you. False friends may
become your enemies. The one advantage of this card is
that the problems are temporary in nature and may be
avoided altogether if you take the proper precautions.
This is a warning that things can go wrong; if you watch
your back, you may keep it only a warning and not a
fact. Check all your affairs carefully, and without delay.
190 Tarot for Beginners
•
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): Sickness, injury. Bad news; a crisis
in your affairs; conflict. Possible losses. The situation is
temporary, however, and may perhaps be one you can
prevent or avoid. Be on your guard.
Reversed (or Negative): Treachery and opposition,
usually unexpected, or from an unexpected direction.
Accident or fatality. Uncertainty.
Swords · 191
NINE OF
SWORDS
�.!!?,
The Nine of Swords
foretells death,
failure, utter
despair.
��
Meaning
The nine of swords is considered, in most interpreta
tions, the worst card in the deck. It foretells death, fail
ure, utter despair. Even among the best of cards, it can
mean illness, loss of money or property, unhappiness. It
means the presence of an unrelenting enemy, either an
actual person or in the form of just plain bad luck. Pro
jects influenced by this card are inevitably bound to
bring you misfortune. The best you can hope for here is
for the inner strength to weather the storm. Note: if
you've done something you shouldn't (or are planning
to) this card means you will be caught and punished:
the unrelenting enemy may not necessarily be the evil
one here if it is the querent who is the wrongdoer.
192 Tarot for Beginners
·
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): Death, despair, utter failure.
Delays and deceptions. An implacable enemy. Evil fate.
Reversed (or Negative): Shame, fear, doubt, suspi
cion. An unreliable person influencing your situation.
Swords • 193
TEN OF
SWORDS
�··�
Meaning
The series of events which began in triumph ends
in misery. The Ten of Swords foretells of sorrow, tears,
and affliction either present or soon to come. It is not
necessarily a card of death (as is the Nine), but it is one
of pain, failure, and desolation. At the best, this card
merely nullifies good luck; at the worst, it intensifies
the misfortunes predicted by other unfavorable cards.
Even friendships or other close relationships will be
temporary, or insufficient to help you overcome this
unhappy ending to your plans and schemes. Any gains
will be brief ones. What is worse, this disastrous end
ing may undermine your confidence in yourself from
now on. You will have to work hard to prevent that
from happening to you.
194 Tarot for Beginners
•
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): Tears, pain and sorrow in store for
the querent. Affliction, misery and desolation. Ruin and
misfortune. Insecure relationships with friends. Expect
your plans to end in failure. All is lost.
Reversed (or Negative): A possible gain, but only a
brief and temporary one. Any profit or success will also
not be permanent.
��
Cups
�--�
195
196 · Tarot for Beginners
KING OF CUPS
Description
Most decks show a mature man, seated on a throne.
Sometimes the throne is shown at the shore, or actually
floating on water. He may or may not be crowned;
most decks show some kind of elaborate headgear
with or without a crown. Usually this King is not
shown wearing armor; if he is, it's generally only a
token amount, such as just the breastplate. In most
decks he is wearing royal robes.
He holds the cup or chalice in his right hand, held
by the stem. In some decks he is holding it up as though
200 · Tarot for Beginners
Meaning
The King of Cups should bring to mind a paternal man,
one who is just, and kindly disposed toward the quer
ent. If he is not your father, he does fill the role of a fair
and loving father, or has done so in the past. He is
someone for whom you feel a genuine affection, and
who displays that affection toward you. This is a man
who can be trusted absolutely; he favors the querent,
and tends to be kind and generous in his relationships
in general. Most interpretations also describe the King
of Cups as a cultivated and cultured man as well; inter
ested in art and science, and possessing a creative intel
ligence. If this card does not represent an actual person,
then circumstances themselves are highly favorable for
whatever endeavor you have in mind.
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): A just and honest man, who is or
has been kindly disposed toward the querent. Respon
sible and mature, he displays paternal feelings toward
the querent. He is intelligent and probably cultured and
well-educated as well; and as a result has skills and con-
Cups • 201
QUEEN OF
CUPS
Description
Most decks show a mature woman, sometimes stand
ing, most often seated on a throne. She is richly dressed,
often robed, and almost always wearing a crown. The
Queen holds the cup in her right hand; if she is stand
ing, she is holding it out toward the viewer as though
offering it. If seated, the cup may be resting on one
knee, or held in both hands. Some decks show the
Queen's cup with a rounded cover. If the Queen is hold
ing the cup in only one hand, then her other hand holds
a scepter, or some other sign of rank. In almost all
decks, she is looking at the cup, as if contemplating it,
or seeing visions in it. As with the King, her expression
is mild; she is often depicted as smiling, perhaps
friendly, even affectionate.
Cups · 203
Meaning
The Queen of Cups should evoke the image of a kind
and generous woman who has a maternal interest in the
querent. If she is not your own mother, she is someone
who is prepared to assist, advise, and mother you. She
is a woman for whom you feel affection and even love,
and with whom you feel accepted, protected, and emo
tionally secure. The Queen of Cups is a loving wife,
good mother, and devoted friend. As a person, she is
intelligent and cultured; she is someone who knows
how to love wisely, and who can (and will if asked)
wisely advise the querent in affairs of the heart. Her
characteristics are a loving intelligence, wisdom, and
personal virtue. She may also be something of a vision
ary; but her visions are tempered by mature judgement
and tend to be accurate.
If the querent is a man, this card represents a true
and trustful wife, or his current or potential true love. If
the querent is a woman, the Queen may be either a con
fidant or a rival in love (the surrounding cards will tell
which); but even if she is a rival, she is a kind one, and
will play fair.
If this card does not represent a person, then the sit
uation is one in which the querent feels, or should feel,
emotionally secure, safe, and even protected. This card
describes a situation in which there are no hidden traps
or unsuspected enmities; you are among people you can
trust, and in a situation in which you can feel at home.
204 · Tarot for Beginners
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive) : A maternal female, who evokes
feelings of affection or love. An honest, devoted female
friend or relative who will perform a service for the
querent. A good mother; a perfect spouse. If not a per
son, then a situation in which you feel emotionally
secure. Success, happiness, pleasure. Wise choices,
especially in personal relationships.
Reversed (or Negative): An untrustworthy or per
verse woman. Vice, dishonor, depravity, meddling.
Cups 205
•
KNIGHT OF
CUPS
��
�-�
Description
Most decks show a young man riding a horse. The
horse is in parade dress and position. The young man
may or may not be wearing armor; either way, he is
well-dressed. Sometimes he also has a hunting horn
hanging by a shoulder strap; if not, he may have a
winged cap. Either way, the symbolism is of a messen
ger of some kind. He carries the cup in his right hand,
holding it out to one side, or out in front of him over the
horse's head, and looking at or even into it. The Knight
is generally shown in a country setting.
206 · Tarot for Beginners
Meaning
A young man with the same qualities as his symbolic
parents. If the card represents a person, this is someone
with a fraternal interest in the querent. He is honest,
intelligent, willing to help you in any way he can; a true
and dependable friend, or even a lover. If the reading
indicates he is a lover, he is someone you can safely
allow yourself to love; even if the relationship should
break up at some future point, this is someone who
would make every attempt not to hurt you. If he is not
a lover, then he is someone who can advise you on the
true nature of the person you are interested in. Like the
Queen, he may also be something of a dreamer; in this
case he is not a visionary, but someone with imagina
tion, and that allows him to understand other people's
feelings as well as his own.
If this is not a person, then expect a message or an
invitation; either will be positive and the situation one
you can trust. The Knight of Cups is also interpreted for
either sex as being the messenger of true love.
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): Honest and intelligent young
man who is friendly toward the querent. A brother,
friend, or lover. Good advice, a message, a visit, or an
invitation. True love; reciprocated love.
Reversed (or Negative): A treacherous, deceitful
young man. Trickery, swindling, fraud, lies. Trust
betrayed. Heartbreak; emotional harm to the querent.
Cups 207
•
PAGE OF CUPS
e&\�
�--�
Description
A young man, well-dressed, stands in a relaxed posi
tion, holding the cup in one hand. Some decks show
him holding the cup out as though presenting it to
someone. Other decks show him obviously in posses
sion of the cup, holding it up to admire it. He is often
shown smiling, and almost always shown looking at
the cup.
Meaning
A young man or woman, possibly your son or daughter
(or someone who responds to you in that way) or
brother or sister (usually a younger sibling). A sensitive
young person with generally the same qualities as his or
208 • Tarot for Beginners
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): A sensitive young man or
woman, one who is closely connected to you, such as a
son or daughter, a brother, sister or cousin, a long-time
friend, old schoolmate, or childhood sweetheart. He or
she will perform a needed service for you. A studious,
intelligent young person. News, a message, arrival of
someone or something. A birth, either of a child or of an
idea or enterprise. A promising start.
Reversed (or Negative): Deceit, seduction, false
flattery, deception.
ACE OF CUPS
��
The Ace of Cups
symbolizes fertility,
celebrations,
consummation of a
worthy union.
�-�
Description
Most decks show a single large cup. Like the Queen's
cup, it usually has a rounded and often decorated cover.
Some decks simply show the cup; others show a hand
holding the cup, either grasping it by the stem or sim
ply displaying it resting on the palm. If there is a hand
shown holding the cup, it is usually issuing from a
cloud. If there is any other symbolism in the back
ground of the illustration, it will have to do with water,
such as a sea beneath the cup and/ or fountains arching
water from the cup.
Meaning
The Ace of Cups symbolizes fertility, celebrations, and
merrymaking, and consummation of a worthy union.
The beginning here is of a marriage or other partner
ship which will be happy in its inception and of benefit
210 · Tarot for Beginners
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): Fertility. Abundance in all things,
especially in love. The beginning of love; or consumma
tion of a union both appropriate and beneficial to all
concerned. True love, joy, contentment. Merriment and
celebration.
Reversed (or Negative): Instability. A false heart;
disappointments in relationships. A change in relation
ships, most likely due to these things. Can mean infi
delity and deceit.
Cups 211
•
TWO OF CUPS
�-�
Meaning
One added to One: the Two of Cups symbolizes a part
nership, a marriage, a union. Whatever the relationship
described, whether a new one upcoming or an old one
strengthened, it will be based on harmony.
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): Love, friendship, affinity, affec
tion. Union, partnership. Mutual sympathy, concord,
harmony. Most often refers to a union of the sexes; can
in some readings refer to other unions or partnerships
which you are considering joining or in which you are
already involved.
212 Tarot for Beginners
·
Ill de
THREE OF
Agua
CUPS
��
The Three of Cups is
a card of success
and victory in
business or
relationships.
c�n�
Meaning
This is a card of success and fulfillment. Some affair or
enterprise in which you have been involved has been or
will soon be concluded in plenty and merriment, to the
complete satisfaction of all concerned. If a romantic
relationship began earlier on, it is at this point that you
are told both have fallen in love.
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): Success, perfection, plenty, merri
ment. Happy issue, fulfillment. Victory; achievement of
great things.
214 · Tarot for Beginners
FOUR OF CUPS
��
The Four of Cups
represents a friendly
warning; your own
negative outlook is
keeping you from
attaining or
appreciating
everything you need
or could hope for.
�--�
Meaning
This card represents a friendly warning. You are told
that everything you need, every good thing you could
possibly hope for, is available to you, but your own dis
satisfaction or negative outlook is keeping you from
recognizing, appreciating, or taking advantage of it.
You are so intent on your displeasure that you are miss
ing fulfillment. One interpretation calls this the "bache
lor I old maid" card, and states that the reason for the
'
long-delayed marriage is because of the querent's
"fussy disposition." In effect, the warning is the same.
The reason you are discontent is because you choose to
be, not because your life is truly unfulfilling.
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): Displeasure, dissatisfaction. Weari
ness with life. Imaginary vexations, disgust. All leading
216 Tarot for Beginners
·
FIVE OF CUPS
�!!?..
The Five of Cups
tells you you are see
ing only the losses
and not the gains;
it's up to you to see
the positive.
Meaning
Here again, it is your attitude which affects your out
look on the situation. Five is a card of losses and gains,
but the probability is that you are seeing only the losses
and not the gains. You have the opportunity for happi
ness, if you will see the positive side of what you have.
Five also predicts a union, possibly a marriage, and
warns that whether or not it's happy will be up to you.
Following from the Four, the Five suggests that the rea
son you're unhappy is because you deliberately (even if
unconsciously) took the down side to prove that your
discontent or disillusionment was correct. You took the
lesser of two choices, or threw away positive gains; in
effect, you cut off your nose to spite your face. You
could have been happy and fulfilled. You still can be.
It's entirely up to you. This is also a card of indecision;
an inability to make up your mind on important issues.
Sometimes the Five portends a change in surroundings,
218 • Tarot for Beginners
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): An upcoming union; a possible
marriage or partnership. There have been losses, but
also gains. The losses are only partial, and the sadness
only momentary. Also, inheritance, but not as much as
the querent wanted or expected. A change of plans, a
change in surroundings or personal situation.
Reversed (or Negative): Bitterness, frustration, an
unhappy marriage; all due to poor choices or unrealis
tic expectations. Surprises, false promises, false projects.
v
Cups • 219
SIX OF CUPS
�-�
Meaning
Your earlier discontent with current situations leads
naturally to this card. Six describes thoughts of past
loves and past happinesses. It is a card of memories and
looking back, of remembering times when you were
happy, in the way a child is happy. Again, how these
memories will affect you depends on you. Don't brood
over what you've "lost"; if you use these memories to
relearn how to be happy, to regain your innocence,
and-most important-to remind you that you have
been happy, you can be happy again. In a particularly
fortunate reading, the appearance of this card can indi
cate that someone or some event will force you to rec
ognize the good in your life.
220 · Tarot for Beginners
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): Memories, looking back (espe
cially on childhood); thoughts of past loves. Happiness
coming from the past, from thoughts of things that have
vanished. A promise for the future; of renewal, happi
ness and love to come.
Reversed (or Negative): New friends, new knowl
edge, new environment. Changes in attitudes and rela
tionships. Things to come soon; something important
soon to happen.
Cups · 221
SEVEN OF
CUPS
�!a:,
The Seven of Cups
represents
imagination and
visions, either
fantastic or
reflective.
�-�
Meaning
This is a card of imagination and visions. Some of the
visions may be on the side of the fantastic: fairy dreams,
castles in the air. Others may be reflective; others close
to, but never quite attaining the status of actual plans.
Basically you're simply daydreaming, not about any
thing definite, but simply letting your imagination take
its own course. Most interpretations suggest that this is
a necessary process, especially at this time: clearing your
mind of old ideas or misconceptions and examining dif
ferent possibilities and potentials, however remote. It
can lead to the creation of new and happier goals.
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): Abundance of fresh but indefinite
ideas or images in the mind of the querent, but nothing
271 Tarot for Beginners
·
EIGHT OF
CUPS
Meaning
The meanings here are contradictory. The Eight of Cups
refers to a situation, event, or enterprise in which you
have been involved or which you are planning. It sug
gests that things will turn out well; in fact, you're being
told you will receive what you've hoped for. But it also
indicates that you're displaying too much caution, and
that doing so will lose for you what you hope to gain. In
this case, it's not that you can't see the good things you
have, but because you're too shy, too unsure of yourself
or your personal worth, or too timid to make your
move. And if you don't make your move, you may lose
what you've worked and hoped for for so long.
There is also an interpretation, which has worked
in practical readings, which adds that the matter at
hand is not as important as it appears, for good or bad,
224 • Tarot for Beginners
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): Fulfillment of a wish, but also
mildness, timidity, modesty. The querent is advised that
honor might be best served by seizing the day, rather
than backing away from it. A matter which looms as a
large problem in the querent's mind is revealed as hav
ing much lesser consequence, for good or bad, once
finally acted upon. Disappointment if the querent does
not act on the matter.
Reversed (or Negative): Great happiness and joy.
Feasting, pleasure. Most often refers to an event the
querent knows about and has either anticipated or
planned; surrounding cards will reveal whether other
events or people will make this event as pleasurable as
hoped, or will detract from it.
Cups 225
•
NINE OF CUPS
�\�
Meaning
There is no negative reading in this card at all. It is a
card of triumph, of complete success, almost of satiety.
Everything you hoped and planned for has or will very
soon come to be, and it is or will be as good if not better
than you dreamed it would. This is sometimes called
"the wish card": it promises fulfillment, harmony and
success in the projects described by other cards in the
reading. If there are unfavorable cards in the reading,
they may retard this ultimate success, but the obstacles
will be a only temporary annoyance. You have done
everything right up to now, and people and/ or events
are also conspiring in your favor. This is your hour.
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): Triumph, victory. Contentment
and even satiation for the querent. Success, advantage,
226 · Tarot for Beginners
X de Agua
TEN OF CUPS
��
)( \f ))
Meaning
This card describes what real love is all about and what
it should lead to: contentment, domestic bliss, satisfac
tion in your accomplishments and relationships. You
are surrounded by those you love and those who love
you, and the things that matter to you matter also to
them, and vice versa. The Ten of Cups creates a picture
of peace and harmony created by people sharing their
lives and caring for each other. Picture cards in the read
ing may identify the other people who are involved in
this state of bliss, or reveal a person who is watching
out for your interests. The Ten is not only a favorable
card but an influential one: it strengthens good cards in
the reading and negates negative ones.
228 Tarot for Beginners
·
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): The perfection of human love and
friendship; true companionship and fulfillment in rela
tionships. Love of home and satisfaction in your own
accomplishments. Also success, but in this case not nec
essarily material; a happy family life, honors, esteem.
Reversed (or Negative): Sorrow, strife, disputes.
Indignation and violence, possibly emotional. A false
heart.
��
Coins
229
230 · Tarot for Beginners
KING
OF COINS
�--�
Description
The King of Coins may or may not be crowned; if not,
he is generally represented as a well-dressed, prosper
ous merchant. He may also be wearing some kind of
jewelry (such as a gold-chain necklace) almost as a
badge of office. He is seated on a throne or handsome
chair; in many decks, his chair is decorated with some
kind of real or mythical animal figure, such as a lion, a
griffin, a bull, or an eagle (again, symbols of royalty,
and temporal or magical power).
His attitude is at the same time proud, yet casual.
This is someone comfortable with his position of power
and who takes it as his due. He usually holds the coin
upright in his right hand, as if showing it off to the
viewer; in some decks, he also holds a scepter in his left
234 · Tarot for Beginners
Meaning
The King of Coins should call to mind a mature man,
both wealthy and courageous. Like the King of Swords,
he represents power, but in a more positive sense. He is
firmly established in his own right, and can-and
does--control the reins of government. He is also per
sonally gifted, and/ or interested in those who are. He
will use his influence to sponsor the arts and sciences,
with, no doubt, profit as his goal in many cases, but also
for their own sake. This is someone who is personally
well-enough established that he can be a patron of the
arts; in that, he also represents the kind of society which
is stable enough that art and science can flourish. If this
card represents a person, he is the personification of the
"enlightened monarch," both wise and powerful. He
will be a man whom the querent admires for both his
successes and his personal refinement. If the card repre
sents a situation, then it predicts financial security and
the kind of stable situation in which culture can flourish.
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): A wealthy, powerful, and cul
tured man, who can provide wise counsel, help, and
inspiration. A man of refinement, knowledgeable about
money and finance, and a true patron of the arts and
sciences. He may be either well-disposed towa_rd the
querent, or indifferent; but he is in either case highly
Coins · 235
QUEEN OF
COINS
Description
Usually depicted as a mature woman, well-dressed; she
may or may not be crowned. Many decks show the
Queen standing, supporting her weight on one leg or
leaning against a decorative chair or throne. As with the
King, she holds the coin aloft in her right hand, display
ing it to the viewer; she is generally shown looking at
the coin and totally occupied with it. If seated, she
holds the coin in both hands, and is also contemplating
it, as if seeing images within it. She sometimes holds a
scepter in her left hand.
The Queen is often shown smiling; she is confident
in her role and presents a kindly or pleasant attitude,
but note that in most decks, the queen is paying
absolute attention to the money.
Coins • 237
Meaning
A regal and respected woman, known for her generous
nature but never someone you can fool or take advan
tage of. She has respect for money, but is not ruled by it;
a wise and prudent manager who provides an example
to others of how best to use and distribute real wealth
and be comfortable with it. Like the King, she is intelli
gent, and she has a greatness of soul which commands
respect and admiration among both her peers and those
she rules. If this card does not represent an actual per
son, then it describes a situation of well-ordered com
fort, which comes not merely from having financial
security, but in knowing how to use money wisely. The
card also represents hope in the form of the ability
and knowledge that you have the ability-to overcome
obstacles with prudence and wisdom.
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): A kind and generous woman, an
excellent and careful manager, with both intelligence
and intuitive knowledge. Like the King, she may either
favor the querent, or she may be indifferent. She is
attractive and very persuasive; she knows how to get
her own way, not through "feminine wiles" but simply
because she knows what she's doing. If not a person,
the card represents security, wisdom and prudence,
wealth, and even opulence.
Reversed (or Negative): A suspicious woman, dis
trusting all around her, and mistrusted in return. An
interfering woman, one who needs to control situations
at any cost. If not a person, the card represents a situa-
238 • Tarot for Beginners
KNIGHT OF
COINS
�-�
The Knight
ofCoins represents
a young man of
great potential, or
unfulfilled
expectations,
quarrels.
c:m·�
Description
Most decks show a young man on horseback; he is usu
ally, but not always, wearing armor. In decks where the
King and Queen are .dressed as merchants rather than
royalty, so is the Knight. In many decks he is not hold
ing the coin; it is suspended in the air either in front of
or behind him. Either way, he is looking directly at it,
even if he has to turn in his saddle to see it. If the coin is
in his hand, he is holding it up as if to exhibit it, but is
not seriously contemplating it. The horse may be shown
walking, or at parade rest; in any case, it is not charging.
This is not a young man doing battle for his family or
ideals; the imagery here is of travel or departure.
240 • Tarot for Beginners
Meaning
The Knight of Coins exhibits the same qualities as his
parents, but also includes elements of moving, either
arrival, or departure, or travel. This is a less mature
image than the King and Queen; he has their potential,
but lacks their experience. He may still be a nice person,
but not as dependable, and sometimes a disappoint
ment to himself and others close to him. He may be
impatient at times, and less willing to assume his
responsibilities. Whether this is a permanent trait, or
one he will eventually outgrow, depends on other cards
in the readings. If this card does not represent a person,
then you are being told that you could be more than
you are if you'd simply settle down and work at it.
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): A young man with an adventur
ous spirit. Possesses great potential, but does not fulfill
it, at least not yet. A materially minded person, one less
likely to look beyond the surface; an adventurer, a gam
bler. Given a task to perform, he has courage and can be
responsible, but is not yet able to set his own goals and
follow them. If not a person: a departure or arrival; pos
sible discord or quarrels, usually concerning unfulfilled
expectations.
Reversed (or Negative): An idle young man, or one
who is negligent or irresponsible. Carelessness, discour
agement, stagnation, apathy. If not a person, may indi
cate being unemployed or discouraged. This card may
also show a lack of focus on the part of the querent; the
inability to choose goals or work toward them wisely.
Coins · 241
PAGE OF COINS
Description
Most decks show a young man standing in a field or
other country setting. He is well-dressed and to all
appearances very pleased with himself. His position
varies. In some cases he holds the coin up in one hand
as if showing it off, and he is admiring it. His left hand
is either gesturing at the ground or hooked in his belt;
the stance is almost that of the Magician. In other decks,
he holds the coin up in both hands, or balancing it on
the tips of his fingers. In either case, he is obviously
pleased with himself and engaged in admiring his pos
session of the coin.
242 · Tarot for Beginners
Meaning
A young man or woman, or perhaps a child, again with
the potential for the same qualities as his or her sym
bolic parents. This is a young person of obvious refine
ment; like his parents appreciative of the arts, but more
sensitive, both in the sense of awareness of others'
needs and in his or her own vulnerability to hurt. The
rapt interest in the coin is generally intended to sym
bolize the scholar; someone so intent on what he is
learning-and on his ability to learn it-that he is less
aware of reality and somewhat impractical. If this card
does not represent a person it indicates that you are
about to receive some kind of news or message. If the
card represents the querent, it indicates ambition and a
need to succeed, especially on a worldly level.
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): Scholarly, reflective young man or
woman; a dreamer. Intelligent, versed in and apprecia,.
tive of the arts, refined, and sensitive. Good news,
and/ or the bearer of good tidings; enjoyment, worldly
pleasure or satisfaction, luxury.
Reversed (or Negative): A banal or coarse person;
selfish and self-involved. A prodigal; liberality, dissipa
tion. A bearer of bad news; disappointment, pain or dis
tress for the querent; waste of material or potential.
ACE OF COINS
c�n�
Description
Most decks simply show a single large coin in the cen
ter of the card, usually with some kind of decorative
design growing out of the top and bottom. In some
decks, the illustration repeats the theme of a divine rev
elation: a huge hand coming out of a cloud, holding the
coin balanced in the palm.
Meaning
The Ace is the card of attainment. The new enterprise
which you are now beginning, or will soon begin, is
de�tined for success; the success will most probably be
measured in material gain of one kind or another (such
as money, status, fame, or some combination of these).
244 · Tarot for Beginners
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): The beginning of a new enterprise
whose success is assured. Contentment, attainment,
wealth, great happiness, triumph.
Reversed (or Negative): The same attainment and
prosperity, but with pain, or at the least without peace
of mind.
Coins 245
•
TWO OF COINS
��
The Two of Coins
signifies good fortune,
gaiety and fun, or
perhaps good news, a
warning to juggle
financal affairs.
c�n�
Meaning
The Two signifies good fortune; also gaiety, and fun. It
also suggests that the querent can expect news of some
kind; most probably a message in writing. In a negative
reading it warns of a necessity to juggle financial affairs,
play off one advantage or situation against another
(such as robbing Peter to pay Paul), with a degree of
uncertainty as to how things will ultimately work out.
Even in a favorable reading, however, this card sug
gests some difficulties in store for the querent.
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): Good fortune. Gaiety and fun.
News, messages (most likely written) received or
246 Tarot for Beginners
•
Ill de Tierra
THREE OF
COINS
�-�
w describes profi-
0 �
....
ciency in a craft,
- 0> profession or trade,
and that the skill
could prove
profitable.
�--�
� � rtf � 'IS h
Meaning
Again, this is a card of success, but with a different appli
cation. The Three of Coins describes proficiency in a
craft, profession, or trade, and predicts the rewards
which can be earned from that proficiency. If this card
describes the querent, then he or she has prepared (or is
preparing, depending on the position in the reading)
themselves to earn a good living, and the presence of this
card in the reading indicates that the choice of profession
will result in success. If the card describes a situation or
future event, you're being told that acquiring a saleable
skill will result in ultimate success. It also suggests that
the querent has the potential to learn such a skill, which
is no small piece of good news in many cases!
248 • Tarot for Beginners
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): Enterprise, commerce. Skilled
labor or the acquiring of skills; ability, craftsmanship.
Success in trade or business. Personal nobility; rise in
prestige; renown and glory.
Reversed (or Negative): Mediocrity, in both work
and other areas; pettiness; weakness.
THREE
Coins · 249
FOUR OF
COINS
�--�
Meaning
Four is a card of possessions and of holding on to what
you have. The possessions are yours by right; you
earned or inherited them. (And note here that "inher
ited" possessions also include skills or talents). The card
also suggests the feeling, on the part of the querent, that
there is a need to guard or protect these possessions.
Other cards in the reading will indicate whether or not
that feeling is justified. The card also cautions that while
resting on your laurels may be comfortable, it is not a
way to go forward or prepare for the future.
250 Tarot for Beginners
·
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): Possessions, gifts. Holding on to
what you have. Legacy or inheritance. Satisfaction in
personal status; taking pleasure in your current situa
tion. Also; a settled situation, in business or in personal
affairs; few worries. Good feelings about the future.
Reversed (or Negative): Opposition, suspense,
delays, obstacles. Possible loss. Possible quarrels, par
ticularly with people close to the querent (such as quar
rels over possessions or inheritances).
Coins • 251
FIVE OF COINS
��
Meaning
This card is a warning; there is a slight potential for suc
cess in business, but there is a much greater potential
for disaster. Even in a positive reading, the Five sug
gests material trouble, losses, or poverty. The querent is
or soon will be in a situation where money is tight,
and/or where material gains or possessions that he or
she counted on will fall through. In some cases the
problems may be caused by circumstances beyond your
control; in others, they may be your own doing. Either
way, you will have to watch your step to avoid ruin.
252 • Tarot for Beginners
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): Possible brief gain in business,
but leading to losses unless great care is taken. Financial
troubles; destitution. Want and poverty, loneliness, sud
den loss.
Reversed (or Negative): Disorder, discord, chaos,
ruin. Profligacy, imprudence, disgrace.
Coins • 253
SIX OF COINS
® ® ®
@ ® The Six of Coins
says the previous
Meaning
In this card the querent's previous problems are
resolved. The indications are that the querent is about
to begin a projector enterprise which is worthy of
praise (as, for example, performing a charitable act);
but the card also suggests that he or she will have the
ability and wherewithal to do this praiseworthy thing.
The six describes or predicts abundance of material
worth and enough to spare. It also describes the quer
ent as being someone who cares enough about others
to use his or her prosperity as a means of helping oth
ers as much as possible.
254 Tarot for Beginners
·
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): A good time to undertake a
praiseworthy action. Hopes fulfilled. Goodness of
heart. Gifts, gratification, abundance, prosperity. Mate
rial wealth and to spare.
Reversed (or Negative): Desire, jealousy, envy, illu
sion. Possible loss. Unhappiness, fretfulness.
Coins 255
•
SEVEN OF
COINS
�l.t.&=,
The Seven of Coins is
a card of profit,
specifically of reap
ing the rewards of
your labors.
Meaning
This is a card of profit-specifically of reaping the
rewards of your labors. The profit is usually financial
(given the suit!), but may be in any area in which the
querent has worked long and well. It aJso predicts con
tinued gradual growth, both personally and in busi
ness, with attending satisfaction in your work and its
fruit. (In numerical sequence the card also suggests that
at least part of the reason for your success is because of
good deeds performed earlier; the result is or will be
paid in good will toward the querent.)
256 · Tarot for Beginners
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): Success, usually financial. Gain in
business or other enterprises. Profit, gain, money.
Rewards for and satisfaction in work done. Gradual
growth of the enterprise. Good fortune. Good will, by
and toward the querent.
Reversed (or Negative): Money worries; specifically
regarding an unwise expenditure or a loan the querent
has been asked to make and which is not sure to be
repaid. Your anxiety is well-founded; be careful here.
Possible bad loans, heavy losses by gambling, bad luck.
Coins · 257
EIGHT OF
COINS
�··�
Meaning
Once again, craftsmanship and knowledge is the key to
eventual success, but here the success is closer. The
Eight states that you know where you're going now,
and how to get there; whether or not you realize it, you
have the skills you need and need only employ them.
Here success is based on your own personal training
and experience; you've fairly and wisely earned the sta
tus you have or will soon attain.
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): Understanding gained through
experience; sureness of purpose. Employment, commis
sions, new business; practiced skills paying off and new
258 · Tarot for Beginners
VIII de Tierra
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ttl
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w (!)
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(!)
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..,
> 01
Coins 259
•
NINE OF COINS
��
The Nine of Coins
signifies order,
security in
possessions and
relationships, the
wisdom and
experience you need
to handle problems.
�··�
Meaning
The Nine of Coins signifies order, security in posses
sions and relationships, accomplishment and success.
Unlike the Three of Coins, which carried with it the
suggestion that it was not the place to stop striving, the
Nine is what success leads to and feels like. You have
the wisdom and experience you need to properly man
age your affairs and to handle any problems that may
come up in the future. Your goals are well and truly
accomplished, or soon will be.
260 • Tarot for Beginners
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): Order and discipline. Plenty in all
things; material well-being. The ability to plan. Safety,
security, prudence, success, accomplishment, wisdom.
Freedom from want. Sometimes, recreation or a well
earned vacation.
Reversed (or Negative): Bad faith, deception, trick
ery, deceit. Plans voided or gone astray.
Coins • 261
de Tierra
TEN OF COINS
X
Meaning
This takes the prediction described in Nine one step fur
ther. You are established, in both family and business;
what you worked for is now in your hands. The card
also describes well-deserved feelings of confidence on
the part of the querent, as well as well-earned honors
received. Ten also carries with it the possibility of inher
itances and legacies.
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): Established family and business.
Confidence and security, gain, honor. Emphasis on fam
ily matters; with business established, there is time for
personal affairs. Inheritances, gifts, pension, wealth.
262 Tarot for Beginners
•
263
264 · Tarot for Beginners
KING OF
WANDS
Description
In most decks, the King of Wands is shown as a distin
guished and dignified-looking man, seated on a throne.
He may or may not be crowned or wearing armor:
some decks show him dressed as a king; in others he
appears as a prosperous merchant. He is obviously con
fident and at ease with himself and his position. His
wand is a full-length staff or rod (nearly as tall as he
would be if he were standing), and he holds it either
leaning against his shoulder, or held out before him.
Either way, its full length is clearly visible to the viewer.
This is a man who is both proud of himself and sure of
his position.
Wands • 269
Meaning
When the King of Wands appears in the reading, he
should call to mind a man of status and wealth who
excels in the areas of business and finance. He is gener
ally a man of humble origin who has succeeded either
due to a stroke of good luck or, most often, because of
his own intelligence and determination. He is likely to
be someone whom the querent admires for both his
position and his accomplishments. He is also someone
who deserves this admiration: his word is good, and his
advice can be trusted. If the querent is a man, the King
may represent a rival, but a generous and honest one. If
the querent is a woman, this man is either a relative or
close family friend, but always a good advisor.
If this card does not describe a person, it indicates
that the situation is favorable, or at least fair, to the
querent, and that the time is probably auspicious to
take action in business or financial matters.
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): A man of status and wealth who
is friendly toward the querent and willing to assist with
either money or advice. He is honest, conscientious,
and intelligent. If he is a rival, he will be a fair and gen
erous one. If a friend, you are well-advised to take this
man's advice. If not a person, the situation itself is an
honest one: things are as they appear to be. Also, the
possibility of unexpected good news, concerning an
inheritance, a career advance, success in an ongoing or
upcoming (usually business or financial) venture.
Unexpected help or advice which will make your
venture easier.
270 · Tarot for Beginners
QUEEN OF
WANDS
�1!?..
The Queen
of Wands represents
an honorable,
intelligent, friendly
woman, confidante,
or valuable
assistance.
Description
Many decks show the queen standing, holding the
wand in her right hand, straight upward with one end
resting on the ground. In some decks, she is seated on a
throne. In either case, the wand is taller than she is. She
may or may not be crowned; it depends on whether the
deck depicts her as a queen or simply as a well-dressed
woman. In many decks, the Queen also holds some
other symbol in her left hand; sometimes a short scepter
or scroll, sometimes a large flower (often a sunflower) .
Like the King, she is relaxed and a t ease with herself
and her position.
272 • Tarot for Beginners
Meaning
The Queen of Wands should call to mind a woman of
money and property. Both in the original interpretations
and especially in our own times, it is highly possible that
she owns or earned that financial standing herself,
rather than simply riding on her husband's coattails. She
is generally someone who displays a love of luxury; she
dresses well and enjoys owning material things.
She can be generous and loving, but while her per
sonality tends to be more magnetic than that of the
King, she also tends to be more careful about the people
she is willing to help or even to love. She is as sensi
ble-and practical-in personal relationships as in busi
ness. She will expect value received for value given;
love received for love given: almost a marketplace stan
dard. However, when she gives her love, it will be sin
cere. If the querent is a man, this woman may represent
his wife, or the woman he should marry (especially if
he intends to succeed financially and needs someone to
carry her share of the burden). If the querent is a
woman, the Queen represents a long-time confidante
and friend.
If this card represents a situation, then the time is
right to initiate a new enterprise, especially one dealing
with finances. You can expect help and advice along
your way, and people who will assist you, and whose
assistance will be valuable. This card can also indicate
that you have the qualities within yourself that you
need to succeed in your endeavor.
Wands · 273
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): An honorable, friendly, and intel
ligent woman. Displays a love of luxury. Sympathetic
toward the querent and someone willing to help with
either money or advice or both. A businesswoman or a
woman of property; one who knows how to manage
her money to the advantage of herself and her family.
Economical, serious, a good counselor. A good time to
make your move in an important endeavor, especially
one involving business or finance.
Reversed (or Negative): A dangerous enemy, since
she operates on intelligence more than emotion in her
opposition. Especially dangerous if her own position,
business, or family are threatened. If not a person, a
time to be cautious, especially in important relation
ships (business or otherwise); don't step on any toes if
you can avoid it. Deceit, infidelity, jealousy. Greed and
avarice.
274 · Tarotfor Beginners
KNIGHT OF
WANDS
The Knight
of Wands is a
trustworthy, faithful
young man, or a
journey or move,
change of job or
relationship.
Description
Most decks show a young man on a rearing or charging
horse. In some decks, he is holding the wand as a
weapon (and many decks which show the wand as a
finished rod may show it here as a club), and is either
attacking or warding off an enemy. In other decks, his
position indicates that he is showing off more than
charging; and in some, he appears to be admiring the
wand or club he holds.
Meaning
If this card represents a person, it will be a young man
whom the querent sees as a helpful relative or friend.
As before, this individual has the same qualities as his
Wands · 275
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): A male friend or relative who is
willing to help the querent. He is a young man but
mature in his behavior, and one who has an almost
instinctive understanding of business and financial
affairs, which is he is working to augment with training
and experience. Also, an unselfish friend. In any case,
someone whose advice you can trust and whose help
you can take if you are in doubt. A journey, a change of
residence or situation.
Reversed (or Negative): Arguments, discord in
personal relationships. Breakup of a friendship; separa
tion, or flight.
276 • Tarotfor Beginners
PAGE OF
WANDS
��
The Page of Wands
indicates a message
is coming from a
young friend, or
information that
will affect your
current enterprise.
�--�
Description
Most decks show a young man standing in a country
setting, leaning on a wand or staff. Also in most decks
the staff is taller than he is. Usually his attitude is
casual; he holds the wand with one hand at his side,
and his position is relaxed. In some decks he holds the
wand with both hands out in front of him. In almost all
decks (except those which show the wand as a shorter
club), he is looking at the top of the staff. The Page is
well-dressed and wearing clothes similar to those of the
King and Queen.
Wands · 2Tl
Meaning
The Page of Wands may represent either a young man
or young woman, but with the same qualities as the
King and Queen. He or she is likely to be sensitive in
nature, but faithful. The appearance of this card in the
reading indicates that you can expect some kind of
news or message. If the card represents a person, the
news will come from a young friend or relative; other
wise, it will just be information or an event that will
strongly affect your current enterprise. The possibility
also exists (if the card is reversed, or in an unfavorable
reading) that this individual could be a rival.
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): Possible help, or at least moral
support, from a sensitive young friend or relative. Also,
if you need someone to bear testimony in your favor
(either in business or in family matters), this person will
do so, or may have already done so. A faithful friend, a
lover. Expect a message. A possible contract likely to be
favorable.
Reversed (or Negative): If a person, this is some
one who wants what you have or want, and who there
fore cannot be trusted. A dangerous rival. Bad news.
Instability and indecision. Flattery, which may put you
off your guard.
ACE OF WANDS
�-�
The Ace of Wands
signifies
beginnings, possibly
an inheritance,
feelings of
contentment or
triumph.
�--�
Description
Almost all decks, including those which show no art
work on the Aces of other suits, show a hand holding the
wand or club at its base. In some decks, this hand is issu
ing from a cloud. Also in almost all decks, including the
ones where the wands are finished rods, the Ace is club
shaped, or at the least has a heavier knob on one end; the
symbolism being determination and willingness to fight
if necessary. Note also almost all decks show leaves and
branches growing out of the club, or somehow symbol
ized in the picture (such as floating alongside). The sym
bolism here is of new growth, despite, or perhaps
because of, being cut off from its roots.
Wands · 279
Meaning
The beginning of an enterprise, most probably involv
ing business or finance. Creation, invention, and/ or the
source of these. A birth, usually of a business or an idea.
Possibly an inheritance, which may be either of money
or property, or of the ability needed to make the enter
prise begun successful. The querent's state of mind is
also appropriate; some decks read this card as feelings
of contentment and triumph. This interpretation is sim
ilar to that of the Ace of Swords, but in a more positive
sense. The implication here is not conquest or the defeat
of enemies but rather of bonds broken and restraints
put aside, enabling you to make your start; in effect, an
escape to freedom.
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): An auspicious start of a new busi
ness or enterprise. Also a good time to start. The cir
cumstances are right, and the ideas and planning are
also right. A state of contentment and triumph.
Reversed (or Negative): Ruin and decline. The pro
ject begun was either ill-conceived or else you did not
have enough information or ability to do it, or the time
was wrong. The other possibility is that your state of
mind is less than appropriate. The reading, for example,
may show that you could or should do this, but that
you lack sufficient confidence or belief in yourself
and/ or in your enterprise. The result in any case will be
failure unless the proper steps are taken.
280 Tarot for Beginners
·
TWO OF
WANDS
�-!.!?:.
��
Meaning
The Two of Wands is not an auspicious card. Something
unexpected is going to happen or enter into the picture.
It is something you did not or could not allow for in
your plans. At the least, it will catch you by surprise. But
it could mean a loss or failure in your new enterprise.
Note that some interpretations reverse this mean
ing entirely and claim for the Two of Wands wealth,
ownership, fortune, and magnificence. But most of
these include the statement that there will be unhappi
ness along with it.
Wands 281
•
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): Unforeseen problems with your
new enterprise. Obstacles and opposition, possibly
from the very people you were counting on for support.
Possibilities include loss of money, failure of a marriage
or partnership, general unhappiness or discontent with
the way things are gofng or with the new business
itself. Chagrin; an apparent success that turned sour.
Reversed (or Negative): Surprise, wonder, strong
feelings evoked. You're in for a surprise of some kind.
Whether it's a good or bad one will be revealed by sur
rounding cards. It's most likely to bring you trouble.
II de Aire
=
c..
Ill
>
..,
282 Tarot for Beginners
·
--
Ill de Aire
THREE OF
WANDS
c:m·�
Meaning
The Three of Wands indicates problems can be resolved
if the person in question remains calm and operates in a
dignified, intelligent, and mature manner. Whatever
problems were introduced earlier on can be overcome
by the querent. Don't act impulsively; you know what
to do. Use your experience and common sense.
In effect, if your earlier troubles were caused by
your own mistakes or even your own feelings of inade
quacy, acting in a mature and responsible manner will
resolve them. If your problems were caused by the inter
ference or opposition of others, you can still resolve
them by taking things firmly in hand at this time. You
may also expect people other than those who caused your
problems to step in and help or advise you.
Wands 283
•
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): A dignified approach to your
business or enterprise will result in financial gain. You
may also get help from an advisor or business associate.
The card indicates cooperation as well as maturity as
the key to successful action. More generally: success in
business or trade; negotiations. A solid foundation can
be or has been established.
Reversed (or Negative): Your problems resolved;
the trouble you were having in this situation is over.
You can expect either the end, or at least a suspension
of, arguments and adversity. It should be fairly smooth
sailing for a while.
284 • Tarot for Beginners
FOUR OF
WANDS
c:m·�
Meaning
Almost a sense of relief: you had some sticky times for
a bit and then your troubles were suddenly resolved.
Now you feel like it's time to relax and enjoy your life
for a while. This card generally indicates happiness,
harmony in business and personal partnerships, and
enjoyable social activities.
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): Enjoyment and gaiety. The plea
sures money can buy; a material outlook on life; spend
ing money you have on things you want. Harmony
with others around you; a general situation of prosper
ity and comfort.
Wands · 285
FIVE OF
WANDS
�.�
��
Meaning
As follows from a period of wild spending and less
than mature financial handling, you are spending most
of your time trying to figure out how to win or earn or
get more money and material things. This is not simply
a matter of trying to make your business grow; it is
greedy competition for material gain. Expect hardship
for a time, based on this hand-to-hand struggle. If
you're doing this yourself, you may be able to ease your
situation by easing off. If it's caused by other people, you
will have to fight them to keep what you have.
[Note: Some interpretations call this the card of
gold, gain, or wealth. You may get the riches you're
after if other signs are favorable.]
Wands · 287
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): Greed and competition for finan
cial gain or material goods. "Keeping up with the
Jones"'; a struggle for wealth and fortune. Hardship.
Immature decisions or goals.
Reversed (or Negative): The competition is neither
fair nor honest. Expect trickery, disputes, and even legal
problems and litigation.
288 Tarot for Beoinners
·
SIX OF WANDS
�!e:,
�--�
Meaning
Here again, the querent can expect something new to
enter into the picture, but in this case, the news is good.
Expect very good news, a message of hope and victory.
Also may indicate gifts about to be received. In either
case, something you've hoped for will come to pass.
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): Good news is on the way. A hope
will be fulfilled or desires gratified. Gifts received.
You've made, or are about to make, a significant con
quest; you will win some issue. You've carried your
affairs to a successful point and are about to receive
your rewards and recognition for your efforts.
Wands • 289
SEVEN OF
WANDS
��
The Seven of Wands
foretells success
achieved by courage
and determination,
profit and gain.
�--�
Meaning
The Seven of Wands is a foreteller of success achieved by
courage and determination. The indications are of profit
and gain; some interpretations call this card "the trea
sury symbol." You have faced off your competition and
will emerge the victor. If this card comes up in answer to
a question, it can also indicate a good time to take a risky
gamble; again, especially one involving money.
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): Financial gain. Success. At least
one major part of your enterprise achieved. There will be
competition and strife, but if you stand your ground you
can stand off your enemies. Even though it may look as
though you're outnumbered, you have the advantage.
Wands • 291
VIII
EIGHT OF
de Aire
WANDS
��
The Eight of Wands
says this is a time
to take action, to
be hopeful, to plan
your next moves.
Meaning
Make speed toward your goals; this is your moment.
You're on the road to almost assured success. Don't be
precipitate, just active. It is also a time for planning
your next moves from here.
Be prepared not just for the single upcoming
event(s) but what will follow from them. Things are
going to start to move now. Note that though this suit
usually concerns business and finance, this card can
also indicate arousal of love; though love in this case
may be either between people or love for your work.
Wands • 293
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): A time to take action; to start on
the next phase of your enterprise. A time to be hopeful,
and to make haste. Things are on the move; move with
them. Also: good luck, arousal of love.
Reversed (or Negative): Quarrels, jealousy, inter
nal disputes (as between spouses, business partners,
etc.), opposition. Things are still moving, but either the
situation or the consequences or both can be unpleasant
to go through. Again, be prepared; know exactly what
you're doing. The times are right not just for you but for
others, and that means somebody is likely to get hurt in
the free-for-all.
294 Tarot for Beginners
·
NINE OF
WANDS
Meaning
The task is performed successfully; the job is done. The
person to whom this card refers has learned discipline,
the ability to plan wisely, and courage under fire. Even
if there are problems (which may be shown by other
cards in the reading), you know how to deal with them;
they no longer defeat you just by happening. If there is
opposition, your skills, strength, and courage will make
you a formidable opponent.
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): Strength, boldness. Ability to deal
with problems or delays. Strong opposition to wrongs.
Self-discipline, order. Final success in your endeavors.
Wands • 295
IX de Aire
-
X
0..
(!)
)>
..,
296 • Tarot for Beginners
Ten of Wands
�-�
Meaning
The feeling that you can do anything, win at anything.
This may encourage a gamble for high stakes, and such
a gamble can result in great gain.
[Note: if surrounding cards are inimical, the gain
may happen anyway, but will bring unhappiness and
trouble.]
This card also contains a warning not to take
things for granted; you have succeeded in your initial
enterprise, but it puts you in a position to achieve
greater things, and these things will be just as hard to
achieve as the one you have just accomplished.
Wands · 297
In the Reading
Upright (or Positive): Fortune, gain, success, but also
possible unhappiness from these things. Possible uncer
tainties in your enterprise, but if you assert yourself,
honor, security, opposition swept away.
Reversed (or Negative): Intrigues and difficulties.
These may be legal (as a lawsuit), or between people. A
great possibility of loss; if surrounding cards are nega
tive, you may lose all you've gained. Treachery. Note: if
this card is reversed but surrounding cards are positive,
the negative influences are still there, but you will be
able to ward them off. In that case, this card is a warn
ing against trouble or false friends.
Divinino with
the Tarot
Reading the Tarot
�-�
HOW TO TELL
FORTUNES
301
302 · Tarot for Beginners
A Ten-Card Spread
One of the most commonly used Tarot spreads is called by
most readers the Ancient Celtic Method. This spread uses
just enough cards to give a fairly detailed picture of the
querent's current circumstances. The Celtic spread can be
used for a general reading; it is also one of the best spreads
to use if you want an answer to a definite question.
Once the deck has been shuffled and cut, the Sig
nificator is placed face up in the center of the table. With
the deck face down, take the first ten cards in order
from the top of the deck and place them into the spread
as described below (see Figure One).
The position of each card in this spread has a defi
nite reference to a specific area of the querent's life or
current circumstances.
FIRST CARD: This covers you. Take the first, or top,
card of the deck and place it face up on top of the Signi
ficator. This card describes the basis of the situation or its
present influences. It tells you the general atmosphere in
which the querent is currently operating, including the
querent' s state of mind in this situation, and/ or the peo
ple or other influences presently at work.
SECOND CARD: This crosses you. The second card
is placed horizontally across the first. If you are using
upright and reverse in your reading, the side facing the
reader should be toward the right.
This card either strengthens or weakens the effects
of the first card. It shows obstacles or ameliorating cir
cumstances; events and situations which currently exist
326 • Tarot for Beginners
10
s 8
Has anyone ever been in love with me? Despite the fact
that the question involves love and romance, the Signi
ficator chosen to represent the querent was the Knight
of Wands. The choice was based on the type of person
this young man is; a self-starter, ambitious, hard-work
ing, and beginning to see some prospects of success. It
is, after all, his involvement with career, and the resul
tant neglect of social opportunities and skills, which is
the basis of this situation.
Here are the cards that came out. [Note: Cards are
upright unless otherwise specified.]
FIRST CARD (This covers you): Page of Cups,
reversed. A card from the suit of love which describes
seduction and deceit.
With a court card, the first thing you want to estab
lish is whether or not the card represents a person, and if
so, who. There have been young women in this man's
life, some of whom he has been very fond of, and he has
had some tentative relationships which have fallen
apart. There is no one, however, who meets this descrip
tion: a friend or lover who deliberately deceived him.
This card, then, does not represent someone else.
However, the covering card describes the basis of the
situation, including the querent's attitude, which is that
he has not paid serious attention to developing rela
tionships. This card, then, represents the querent-and
answers his stated question! If he's trying to convince
himself that some woman from his past is desperately
in love with him, he's only deceiving himself. And then
the reading goes on from there.
What do you do when the first card answers the
question? One very good possibility is that the stated
question was not what the querent really meant to ask,
or really needed to know.
Tarot Spreads • 333
A Five-Card Spread
This is an even simpler spread that works very well for
minor inquiries. It uses only the twenty-two cards of
the Major Arcana; Minor Arcana cards are removed
from the deck before shuffling.
It's generally not necessary to use a Significator,
since the reading as a whole refers directly to the quer
ent. You would need a Significator only if the question is
being asked for or about someone else. In that case, it is
the only card you'll take from the Minor Arcana.
Preparation of the deck is also simpler. With the
Minor Arcana cards removed from the deck, the cards
Tarot Spreads • 339
2 3 4 5
A Seven-Card Spread
As you've seen, very often the Tarot provides an expla
nation, rather than a straightforward answer. You're
told not only what can happen but why, and what will
change it and how, plus a wealth of other comments
and insights into both the situation and the personal
attributes of the querent.
Not all questions require that kind of detail. Some
times you just want a quick and simple answer. This
last spread can be interpreted in detail if you choose, or
simply used to answer yes or no. Note: This spread can
not be used for a general reading; you must ask a defi
nite question, and it must be phrased so that it can be
answered yes or no.
Tarot Spreads • 343
S F
1 2 3 4 5 6
Once the deck has been shuffled and cut, lay out
the first seven cards into your spread from right to left
(see Figure Three). If you are going to interpret the
cards individually, the first three cards represent the
past, or the events leading up to this situation. The last
three cards reveal the future, or how the situation will
conclude. The center card is called the Focus Card; it
will give you the most information about the situation.
The focus card should be placed on top of the Significa
tor when it is dealt out.
Note: If you are going to interpret the cards indi
vidually, the focus card can also serve as a Significator
chosen by the Tarot; i.e., rather than choosing a Signifi
cator up front, you interpret the center card as the rea
son for the spread's answer to your question.
Here's how it works. The querent asks his or her
question, and the cards are shuffled and cut for the
reading. The cards are laid out in order from right to left
344 • Tarot for Beginners
(the focus card will be the fourth card placed into the
spread). Any cards which appear upright in the spread
mean yes; reversed cards mean no. The first three and
last three cards are valued at one point each; the focus
card is worth two points. A simple bit of arithmetic
does the rest; add up the yes and no points and you
have your answer.
This spread also provides a quick and easy way to
determine whether or not the cards will answer a par
ticular question for the querent. If the results come out
even, then the querent must make his or her own deci
sion on this matter without any help from the Tarot.
risk. She may not die on the table, but the surgery is
bound to cause more problems than it solves.
CARD SIX: Ten of Wands, upright. A gamble for
high stakes. The meaning here is clear. What this young
woman is gambling with is her life. And the question at
this point is whether or not she should have this
surgery at all.
CARD SEVEN: Four of Cups, reversed. New rela
tionships; an unforeseen event. A confirmation of the
focus card; something is going to change. In this case,
however, it will change because of new people, and
potentially friendly ones, given the suit, that either the
querent or her daughter are soon to meet.
This reading illustrates just how definitely a Tarot
reading can change your future.
The first question I asked after getting these results
was how many doctors they had seen before scheduling
this surgery. The answer was only this one. Over the
next week, however, they consulted three more-and
not one of them recommended surgery for the daugh
ter 's medical problem. The problem was real, but all
three "second opinions" prescribed a course of medica
tion for her condition. With the proper medication, it
took a little more than three weeks for her condition to
clear up entirely, and she never had the totally unneces
sary surgery.
And I hardly need add that this was one of the
most satisfying readings I'd done in a long while.
Results like this are why you take the time and trouble
to learn to read the Tarot cards.
Tarot Spreads • 347
Conclusion
So where does all this leave you? You start with a pecu
liar-looking deck of seventy-eight cards and a book that
lists pages of interpretations for each one of them. You
know that this deck holds within it the answers to your
important questions. How do you make it render up
those answers to you?
In order to do an accurate reading, you have to know
the meanings of the cards, but unless you have total
recall, simply memorizing all that information is an
impossible task. And even with a photographic mem
ory, it's a pretty pointless one. The lists of words and
phrases given as divinatory interpretations are mean
ingless in and of themselves. You have to use them in a
reading to understand how they apply to real-life situa
tions. Which makes it a kind of Catch-22: in order to use
them you have to know them, but in order to know
them you have to use them.
In addition, for both the Major and Minor Arcana,
I told you that not all of the definitions given for any
one card apply at the same time. You not only have to
know all the definitions, you have to know how to pick
the one that makes sense in the context of the reading.
Determining the exact interpretation of any card in
a reading is simply a matter of experience. You learn,
over time, what each of the listed interpretations actu
ally mean as they apply to real situations. And you also
learn how to determine what the most logical interpre
tation is in a specific reading.
However, that kind of explanation does you little
good. This is a beginner's book after all!-it is no help
to be told, as you have been told throughout this book,
348 · Tarot for Beginners
YOUR FUTURE IN
YOUR CARDS
351
352 · Tarot for Beginners
The Deck
This remarkable new deck
employs, for the first time ever, the
powerful energies of Brazilian
Candomble. Candomble is the liv
ing, spiritist religion that origi
nated with the Yoruba people of
west-central Africa and is similar
to Santeria in its worship of the
Orixas, or Orishas. Orishas are
"saints," or more accurately,
"Supernatural Beings"-such as
"Eleggua," "Xango" ("Chango") and "Yemanya"-archetypes of
sacred, powerful, and pure energy.
"The Tarot of the Orishas" consists of of 77 breathtaking, full
color cards and is based on numerology, astrology and other
branches of metaphysics. Twenty-five cards represent the Orishas,
and can be compared with the major arcana of the traditional Tarot.
The remaining 52 cards (or "minor arcana") are divided into four
groups of 13 cards each, representing the four elements.
1-56718-843-5, 77 full-color cards with instruction booklet
in English & Spanish $19.95
The Kit
"The Tarot of the Orishas" Kit comes complete with the deck and
book that delves into the origins and meanings of each card and
ways to use the cards
1-56718-842-7, Book: In English & Spanish, 384 pgs, 6 x 9, illus.,
softcover; Card Deck: 77 full-color cards $29.95
Book Only:
1-56718-844-3, 384 pgs, 6 x 9, illus., softcover $12.95
THE NEW GOLDEN DAWN RIT·
UAL TAROT DECK
by Sandra Tabalba Cicero
The original Tarot deck of the Her
metic Order of the Golden Dawn
has been copied and interpreted
many times. While each deck has its
own special flair, The New Golden
Dawn Ritual Tarot Deck may well
be the most important new Tarot
deck for the 1990s and beyond.
From its inception 100 years
ago, the Golden Dawn continues to
be the authority on the initiatory
and meditative teachings of the
Tarot. The Golden Dawn used cer
tain cards in their initiation rituals. Now, for the first time ever, a
deck incorporates not only the traditional Tarot images but also all
of the temple symbolism needed for use in the Golden Dawn rituals.
This is the first deck that is perfect both for divination and for ritual
work. Meditation on the Major Arcana cards can lead to a lightning
flash of enlightenment and spiritual understanding in the Western
magickal tradition. The New Golden Dawn Ritual Tarot Deck was
encouraged by the late Israel Regardie, and it is for anyone who
wants a reliable Tarot deck that follows the Western magickal tradi
tion.
o-87542-138-5, boxed set: 79-card deck with booklet $19.95
Complete Kit
1-56718-267-4, Book: 6 x 9, 272 pgs., illus., softcover
Deck: 78 full-color cards, Layout Sheet: 18" x 24", four-color
$34.95
r-------------,
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