WHAT IS THE TAROT?
No study of occult philosophy is possible without an acquaintance with symbolism, for if the words occultism and
symbolism are correctly used, they mean almost one and the same thing. Symbolism cannot be learned as one learns
to build bridges or speak a foreign language, and for the interpretation of symbols a special cast of mind is necessary;
in addition to knowledge, special faculties, the power of creative thought and a developed imagination are required.
One who understands the use of symbolism in the arts, knows, in a general way, what is meant by occult symbolism.
But even then a special training of the mind is necessary, in order to comprehend the "language of the Initiates", and
to express in this language the intuitions as they arise.
There are many methods for developing the "sense of symbols" in those who are striving to understand the hidden
forces of Nature and Man, and for teaching the fundamental principles as well as the elements of the esoteric
language. The most synthetic, and one of the most interesting of these methods, is the Tarot
In its exterior form the Tarot is a pack of cards used in the south of Europe for games and fortune-telling. These cards
were first known in Europe at the end of the fourteenth century, when they were in use among the Spanish gypsies.
A pack of Tarot contains the fifty-two ordinary playing cards with the addition of one "picture card" to every suit,
namely, the Knight, placed between the Queen and the Knave. These fifty-six cards are divided into four suits, two
black and two red and have the following designation: sceptres (clubs), cups (hearts), swords (spades), and pentacles
or disks (diamonds). In addition to the fifty-six cards the pack of Tarot has twenty-two numbered cards with special
names:-

1.        The Magician
2.        The High Priestess
3.        The Empress
4.        The Emperor
5.        The Chariot (7)
6.        The Lovers
7.        The Hierophant (5)
8.        Strength
9.        The Hermit
10.         The Wheel of Fortune
11.         Justice
12.         The Hanged Man
13.         Death
14.         Temperance
15.         The Devil
16.         The Tower
17.         The Star
18.         The Moon
19.        The Sun
20.         Judgment
21.         The World
22.         The Fool

This pack of cards, in the opinion of many investigators, represents the Egyptian hieroglyphic book of seventy-eight
tablets, which came to us almost miraculously.
The history of the Tarot is a great puzzle. During the Middle Ages, when it first appeared historically, there existed a
tendency to build up synthetic symbolical or logical systems of the same sort as Ars Magna by Raymond Lully. But
productions similar to the Tarot exist in India and China, so that we cannot possibly think it one of those systems
created during the Middle Ages in Europe; it is also evidently connected with the Ancient Mysteries and the Egyptian
Initiations. Although its origin is in oblivion and the aim of its author or authors quite unknown, there is no doubt
whatever that it is the most complete code of Hermetic symbolism we possess.
Although represented as a pack of cards, the Tarot really is something quite different. It can be "read" in a variety of
ways. As one instance, I shall give a metaphysical interpretation of the general meaning or of the general content of
the book of Tarot, that is to say, its metaphysical title, which will plainly show that this work could not have been
invented by illiterate gypsies of the fourteenth century.
The Tarot falls into three divisions: The first part has twenty-one numbered cards; the second part has one card 0; the
third part has fifty-six cards, i. e., the four suits of fourteen cards. Moreover, the second part appears to be a link
between the first and third parts, since all the fifty-six cards of the third part together are equal to the card 0.
Now, if we imagine twenty-one cards disposed in the shape of a triangle, seven cards on each side, a point in the
centre of the triangle represented by the zero card, and a square round the triangle (the square consisting of fifty-six
cards, fourteen on each side), we shall have a representation of the relation between God, Man and the Universe, or
the relation between the world of ideas, the consciousness of man and the physical world.
The triangle is God (the Trinity) or the world of ideas, or the nominal world.
The point is man's soul. The square is the visible, physical or phenomenal
world. Potentially, the point is equal to the square, which means that all the
visible world is contained in man's consciousness, is created in man's soul.
And the soul itself is a point having no dimension in the world of the spirit,
symbolized by the triangle. It is clear that such an idea could not have
originated with ignorant people and clear also that the Tarot is something
more than a pack of playing or fortune-telling cards.
H. P. Blavatsky mentions the Tarot in her works, and we have some reason for believing that she studied the Tarot. It
is known that she loved to "play patience". We do not know what she read in the cards as she played this game, but
the author was told that Madame Blavatsky searched persistently and for a long time for a MSS. on the Tarot.
In order to become acquainted with the Tarot, it is necessary to understand the basic ideas of the Kabala and of
Alchemy. For it represents, as, indeed, many commentators of the Tarot think, a summary of the Hermetic
Sciences-the Kabala, Alchemy, Astrology, Magic, with their different divisions. All these sciences, attributed to Hermes
Trismegistus, really represent one system of a very broad and deep psychological investigation of the nature of man in
his relation to the world of noumena (God, the world of Spirit) and to the world of phenomena (the visible, physical
world). The letters of the Hebrew alphabet and the various allegories of the Kabala, the names of metals, acids and
salts in alchemy; of planets and constellations in astrology; of good and evil spirits in magic-all these were only means
to veil truth from the uninitiated.
But when the true alchemist spoke of seeking for gold, he spoke of gold in the soul of man. And he called gold that
which in the New Testament is called the Kingdom of Heaven, and in Buddhism, Nirvana. And when the true astrologer
spoke of constellations and planets he spoke of constellations and planets in the soul of man, i.e., of the qualities of
the human soul and its relations to God and to the world. And when the true Kabalist spoke of the Name of God, he
sought this Name in the soul of man and in Nature, not in dead books, nor in biblical texts, as did the
Kabalist-Scholastics. The Kabala, Alchemy, Astrology, Magic are parallel symbolical systems of psychology and
metaphysics. Any alchemical sentence may be read in a Kabalistic or astrological way, but the meaning will always be
psychological and metaphysical.
We are surrounded by a wall built of our conceptions of the world, and are unable to look over this wall at the real
world. The Kabala presents an effort to break this "enchanted circle". It investigates the world as it is, the world in itself.
The world in itself, as the Kabalists hold, consists of four elements, or the four principles forming One. These four
principles are represented by the four letters of the name of Jehovah. The basic idea of the Kabala consists in the
study of the Name of God in its manifestation. Jehovah in Hebrew is spelt by four letters, Yod, He, Vau and He-I. H. V.
H. To these four letters is given the deepest symbolical meaning. The first letter expresses the active principle, the
beginning or first cause, motion, energy, "I"; the second letter expresses the passive element, inertia, quietude, "not I;"
the third, the balance of opposites, "form"; and the fourth, the result or latent energy.
The Kabalists affirm that every phenomenon and every object consists of these four principles, i.e., that every object
and every phenomenon consists of the Name of God (The Word),-Logos.
The study of this Name (or the four-lettered word, tetragrammaton, in Greek) and the finding of it in everything
constitutes the main problem of Kabalistic philosophy.
To state it in another way the Kabalists hold that these four principles penetrate and create everything. Therefore,
when the man finds these four principles in things and phenomena of quite different categories (where before he had
not seen similarity), he begins to see analogy between these phenomena. And, gradually, he becomes convinced that
the whole world is built according to one and the same law, on one and the same plan. The richness and growth of his
intellect consists in the widening of his faculty for finding analogies. Therefore the study of the law of the four letters, or
the name of Jehovah presents a powerful means for widening consciousness.
This idea is perfectly clear, for if the Name of God be really in all (if God be present in all), all should be analogous to
each other-the smallest particle analogous to the whole, the speck of dust analogous to the universe, and all
analogous to God. The Name of God, the Word or Logos is the origin of the world. Logos also means Reason; the
Word is the Logos, the Reason of everything.
There is a complete correspondence between the Kabala and Alchemy and Magic. In Alchemy the four elements which
constitute the real world are called fire, water, air and earth; these fully correspond in significance with the four
kabalistic letters. In Magic they are expressed as the four classes of spirits: elves (or salamanders), undines, sylphs
and gnomes.
The Tarot in its turn is quite analogous to the Kabala, Alchemy and Magic, and, as it were, includes them.
Corresponding to the four first principles or four letters of the Name of God, or the four alchemistic elements, or the
four classes of spirits, the Tarot has four suits-sceptres, cups, swords and pentacles. Thus every suit, every side of
the square, equal to the point, represents one of the elements, controls one class of spirits. The sceptres are fire or
elves (or salamanders); the cups are water or undines; the swords are air or sylphes; and pentacles, earth or gnomes.
Moreover, in every suit the King means the first principle or fire; the Queen-the second principle or water; the
Knight-the third principle or air, and the Page (knave)-the fourth principle or earth.
Then again, the ace means fire; the deuce water; the three-spot, air; the four-spot earth. Then again the four-spot is
the first principle, the five spot, the second etc.
In regard to the suits, one may add that the black suits (sceptres and swords) express activity and energy, will, initiative
and the subjective side of consciousness; and the red (cups and pentacles) express passivity, inertia and the objective
side of consciousness. Then the first two suits (sceptres and cups) signify "good" and the other two (swords and
pentacles) mean "evil". Thus every card of the fifty-six indicates (independently of its number) the presence of the
principle of activity or passivity, of "good" or "evil", arising either in man's will or from without. And the significance of
each card is further deciphered thorough its various combinations with the suits and numbers in their symbolical
meaning. The fifty-six cards as a whole represent, as it were, a complete picture of all the possibilities of man's
consciousness. And this makes the Tarot adaptable for fortune-telling. Thus, including the Kabala, Astrology, Alchemy
and Magic, the Tarot makes it possible to "seek gold", "to evoke spirits," and "to draw horoscopes", simply by means of
this pack of cards without the complicated paraphernalia and ceremonies of an alchemist, astrologer or magician.
But the main interest of Tarot is in the twenty-two numbered cards. These cards have numerical meaning and also a
very involved symbolical significance.
The literature relating to the Tarot has in view mainly the reading of the symbolical designs of the twenty-two cards.
Very many writers on occultism have arranged their works on the plan of the Tarot. But this is not often suspected
because the Tarot is rarely mentioned. Oswald Wirth speaks of origin of the Tarot in his Essay upon the Astronomical
Tarot.
"According to Christian , the twenty-two major arcana of the Tarot represent the hieroglyphic paintings which were
found in the spaces between the columns of a gallery which the neophyte was obliged to cross in the Egyptian
initiations. There were twelve columns to the north and the same number to the south, that is, eleven symbolical
pictures on each side. These pictures were explained to the candidate for initiation in regular order, and they
contained the rules and principles for the Initiate. This opinion is confirmed by the correspondence which exists
between arcana when they are thus arranged."
In the gallery of the Temple the pictures were arranged in pairs, one opposite another, so that the last picture was
opposite the first, the last but one opposite the second, etc. When the cards are so placed we find a highly interesting
and deep suggestion. In this way the mind finds the one in the two, and is led from dualism to monism, which is what we
might call the unification of the duad. One card explains the other and each pair shows moreover that they can be only
mutually explanatory and mean nothing when taken separately.
Thus, for instance, the cards 10 and 13 ("Life" and "Death") signify together a certain whole or complementary
condition which we cannot conceive by the ordinary, imperfect mental processes. We think of life and death as two
"opposites", antagonistic one to the other, but, if we thought further, we should see that each depends on the other for
existence and neither could come into existence separately.
A symbol may serve to transfer our intuitions and to suggest new ones only so long as its meaning is not defined. Real
symbols are perpetually in process of creation; but when they receive a definite significance they become hieroglyphs
and finally a mere alphabet. As this they express simply ordinary concepts, cease to be a language of the Gods or of
initiates and become a language of men which everyone may learn.
Properly speaking, a symbol in occultism means the same as in art. If an artist uses ready-made symbols his work will
not be true art, but only pseudo-art,. If an occultist begins to use ready-made symbols, his work will not be truly occult,
for it will contain no esotericism, no mysticism, but only pseudo-occultism, pseudo-esotericism, pseudo- mysticism.
Symbolism in which the symbols have definite meanings is pseudo-symbolism.
Having made this idea clear in his mind, the author found that the key to the Tarot must lie in imagination and he
decided to make an effort to re-design the cards, giving descriptive pictures of the Tarot, and to interpret the symbols,
not by means of analysis, but by synthesis. The reader will find in the following little "pen pictures" reflections of many
authors who wrote on the Tarot as St. Martin, Eliphas Levi, Dr. Papus etc. and of other authors who certainly never
thought of the Tarot as, for example, Plotinus, Gichtel (XVII century), Friedrich Nietzsche, M. Collins etc., who came
nevertheless to the same fundamental principles as the unknown authors of the Tarot.
Descriptions of the arcanas in these "pen pictures" often represent a conception which is almost entirely subjective, for
instance, that of card 18. And the author likes to think that another might conceive of the same symbols differently, in
any case he considers this quite possible.
Any one interested in this philosophical puzzle might well ask, What then is the Tarot? Is it a doctrine or merely a
method? Is it a definite system or merely an alphabet by means of which any system may be constructed? In short, is it
a book containing specific teachings, or is it merely an apparatus, a machine which we may use to build anything, even
a new universe.
The author believes that the Tarot may be used for both purposes, though, of course, the contents of a book that may
be read either forward or backward cannot be said to be, in the ordinary sense, strictly definite. But perhaps we find in
this very indefiniteness of the Tarot and in the complexity of its philosophy, the element which constitutes its
definiteness. The fact that we question the Tarot as to whether it be a method or a doctrine shows the limitation of our
"three dimensional mind," which is unable to rise above the world of form and contra-positions or to free itself from
thesis and antithesis! Yes, the Tarot contains and expresses any doctrine to be found in our consciousness, and in
this sense it h a s definiteness. It represents Nature in all the richness of its infinite possibilities, and there is in it as in
Nature, not one but all potential meanings. And these meanings are fluent and ever-changing, so the Tarot cannot be
specifically this or that, for it ever moves and yet is ever the same.
In the following "pen-pictures" cards are taken in pairs:-I and 0; II and XXI; III and XX etc.-in each pair one card
completing the sense of another and two making one.
Card I.-"The Magician". "Man" Superman. The Initiate. The Occultist. Higher consciousness. Human Logos. The
kabalistic "Adam Kadmon". Humanity. "Homo Sapiens".
Card II.-"The High Priestess". Occultism. Esoterism. Mysticism. Theosophy. Initiation. Isis. Mystery.
Card III.-"The Empress". Nature in its phenomenal aspect. The ever renewing and re-creating force of Nature. The
objective reality.
Card IV.-"The Emperor". Tetragrammaton. The law of four. Latent energy of Nature. Logos in the full aspect with all
possibilities of the new Logos. Hermetic philosophy.
Card V.-"The Chariot". "Man." The Imagination. Magic. Self-suggestion. Self deceit. Artificial means of attainment.
Pseudo-occultism. Pseudo-theosophy.
Card VI.-"The Lovers". "Man". Another aspect of the "Adam Kadmon", the "Perfect Man", "The divine androgyne". Love
as the efforts of "Adam Kadmon" to find himself. The equilibrium of contraries. The unification of the duad, as the
means of attaining the Light.
Card VII.-"The Hierophant". Mysticism. Theosophy. Esoteric side of all religions.
Card VIII.-"Strength". The Real Power. Strength of love. Strength of Union (Magic chain). Strength of the Infinite.
Occultism. Esoterism. Theosophy.
Card IX.-"The Hermit". "Man". The Path to the Initiation. Seeking for truth in the right way. Inner Knowledge. Inner Light.
Inner Force. Theosophy. Occultism.
Card X.-"The Wheel of Chance". The Wheel of Life. The life ever changing and ever remaining the same. The Circle of
Time and the four elements. The idea of the circle.
Card XI. -"Justice". Truth. Real Knowledge. Inner Truth. Occultism. Esoterism. Theosophy.
Card XII.-"The Hanged Man". "Man". The Pain of the higher consciousness bound by the limitations of the body and
mind. Superman in the separate man.
Card XIII.-"Death". Another aspect of Life. Going away in order to come back at the same time. Completion of the circle.
Card XIV.-"Temperance" (Time). The first attainment. The "Arcanum Magnum" of the occultists. The Fourth Dimension.
Higher space. "Eternal Now".
Card XV.-"The Devil". "Man". Weakness. Falsehood. The Fall of man into separateness, into hatred and into finiteness.
Card XVI.-"The Tower". Sectarianism. Tower of Babel. Exoterism. Confusion of tongues. Fall of exoterism. The force of
Nature re-establishing the truth distorted by men.
Card XVII.-"The Star". The real aspect of the Astral World. That which maybe seen in extasy. The imagination of
Nature. Real Knowledge. Occultism.
Card XVIII.-"The Moon". The Astral World as it is seen by the artificial means of magic. "Psychic", "spiritistic" world.
Dreads of the night. The real light from above and the false representation of that light from below. Pseudo-mysticism.
Card XIX.-"The Sun". The Symbol and manifestation of the tetragrammaton. Creative power. Fire of life.
Card XX.-"Judgment". The resurrection. Constant victory of life over death. Creative activity of nature in the death.
Card XXI.-"World". Nature. The World as it is. Nature in its noumenal aspect. Esoteric side of nature. That which is
made known in esoterism. Inner reality of things. Human consciousness in the circle of time between the four elements.
Card 0.-"The Fool". "Man." An ordinary man. A separate man. The uninitiate Lower consciousness. The end of a ray
not knowing its relation to the centre.
The twenty-two cards may be divided into three divisions including each seven cards of similar meaning, the 22nd card
(No 21) as a duplicate (of the No 10) standing outside the triangle or forming a point in its centre.
The three sets of sevens belong: the first one to the Man, the second to the Nature and the third to the higher
knowledge or to the Theosophy in the large sense of the word.
The First set of 7 cards: I-Magician; 0-The Fool; V-The Chariot; IX-The Hermit; VI-Lovers; XV-The Devil; XII-The
Hanged Man.
The contents of these seven cards if taken in time picture seven degrees of the path of Man in his way to the
Superman, or if taken in the Eternal Now picture seven faces of Man or seven I-s of man co-existing in him. This last
meaning represents the inner sense of the secret doctrine of the Tarot in its relations to Man.
The second set of 7 (Nature) includes cards: III.-The Empress; X-Life; XIII-Death; XIV-Time; XVI-The Tower; XIX-The
Sun; XX-Judgement.
The third set of 7 (Theosophy) includes cards: II-The High Priestess; IV-The Emperor; VIII-Strength; VII-The
Hierophant; XI-Justice; XVII-The Star; XVIII-The Moon.
Symbolism Of The Tarot: What is the Tarot?
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