THE TAROT CARDS
By J. W. BRODIE-INNES
THE strange weird-looking cards known as the Tarot, with their bizarre
designs, have interested and puzzled archaeologists, mystics and
occultists for over a century; and many books have been written, from
ponderous and learned tomes to popular manuals, from M. Court de
Gebelin's Monde Primitif in I781 to Mr. A. E. Waite's Key
to the Tarot in 1910. Yet the mystery remains unsolved. What was
their origin? What do they mean? Are they primarily an occult
treatise told in hieroglyphics, or merely the implements of a game of
chance or skill, used as an afterthought for purposes of divination?
Was their origin Egyptian, or Judian, or Chinese, or some as yet
unguessed source? There is no reliable evidence, though there is
plenty of bold assertion. The fact remains that we know they existed
in the fourteenth century, and prior to that they are wrapt in
impenetrable obscurity. Having read all the books I could get access
to on the subject, and studied many theories and speculations, I
finally arrived at the Scottish verdict of " Not proven." Under these
circumstances I should hesitate to intrude into the distinguished
circle of writers on the Tarot, even to the extent of an article, but
that it so chances that I have one or two slight contributions to the
study, which may be of interest to inquirers.
Many years ago it was my privilege to examine at leisure the
magnificent collection of playing cards made by my friend, Mr. George
Clulow, one of the greatest living experts on the subject. That
collection is now in America, where I am told it is the model for all
such collections. The item that chiefly interested me was a splendid
series of Tarot packs of all ages and all countries. And the point
that struck me most was the continuance of the designs throughout,
often it is true corrupted, where an ignorant engraver, copying from a
copyist, and obviously unable to understand a symbol, had expressed it
by an unmeaning flourish, or substituted a flower, or some object he
was acquainted with, for an uncomprehended symbol. Thus the Bateleur
who in the oldest examples had magical implements before him, came to
have a shoemaker's tools. But by comparison of one pack with another
these could easily be rectified. Occasionally some local or political
cause had produced variations, but these also were detected without
trouble. One such occurs in a modern French pack in my possessioh,
where a strong antipapal bias has occasioned the substitution of the
figures of Juno and Jupiter for the original La Papesse and Le Pape.
Now and then some enterprising innovator has redrawn the entire pack
to suit his own ideas of the symbology, as did the fantastic peruquier
Alliette, who under the pseudonym Etteilla (being his own name spelt
backwards) posed as an illuminated adept. But these have attained no
vogue, and are now merely of interest to collectors, for they embody,
not the ideals, whatever they may be, of the old Tarot, but only
Etteilla's notion of what they ought to be. Discounting however these
variants, the persistence of the designs through some five centuries,
and many countries, is, to say the least of it, remarkable. And
whether or no those designs are comprehensible, one feels thankful
that the redrawers have not succeeded in displacing the old
traditional patterns.
That the cards have long been used in Italy, and perhaps
elsewhere, for a game is certain, and that before ever they were
written about as occult emblems or implements of divination. Lord
Malion, in his History of the Forty-five, quotes an English
lady who met Prince Charles Edward in Rome in 1770 at the Princess
Palestrini's, when he asked her if she knew the game of Tarrochi, and
she spoke of his ha[lacuna]ng the Tarot cards and explaining them. But
one may conclude from the designs that they were originally intended
for more than this. As played in Italy to-day the 22 Atus or Trumps
are often omitted, and many packs are sold without these. But taking
the ordinary pip cards, if they were simply used for a game, the
ancient designs, which have persisted through so many years and in
divers countries, would seem meaningless. The numbers of pips as in
the common English packs would be sufficient. Why, for example, should
the two of Fentacles have a serpent coiled round the two pips in the
form of the algebraic symbol of infinity. And here we may say that
those well-meaning writers who have redrawn the cards have gone on the
wrong tack. Admitting that we have no evidence of the original meaning
(there may or may not be a secret tradition, I wish to make no
assertion as to this) it is surely the part of wisdom to preserve the
ancient symbol as clearly as we can, and await enlightenment, rather
than to assume a meaning, and form a new symbol consonant thereto,
which may be miles away from the primitive intention.
This at all events was the thought that came to me on examining
Mr. Clulow's wonderful collection, and noting the persistence of the
designs, and the variants of which I have spoken.
With regard to the 22 Atus or Trumps the case is different. It
would be impossible in the compass of a single article to go into all
the various interpretations that have been put upon them, nor am I
sure that it would serve any good purpose to do so. In the absence of
evidence as to the intention of the original designer they must remain
as merely the speculations of individual writers. But there is much to
be said for the idea of Eliphaz Levi that they were to be referred to
the Hebrew aJpiiabet. Students of the Qabala, who are familiar with
the symbology of the Hebrew letters, have often been struck with the
correspondence of some of the Atus with some of the letters. There can
be no doubt that these cards are hieroglyphics of some kind, though
the meaning seems to be in dispute; but whether they represent a
series, such as the history of the soul, or cosmical evolution, or the
grades of training of an initiate, or a synthesis of all of these and
possibly others, there seems no positive evidence, but a great wealth
of speculation. The connection with the Hebrew alphabet would largely
depend on the attribution and as twenty-one out of the twenty-two
cards are numbered, the position assigned to the card marked zero
called le Mat, or the Fool, must be the crucial point; and as to this
there is wide divergence among commentators. The wise student will
maintain an open mind, and wait for further evidence; Eliphaz Levi
appears to take one a certain distance, and then slams the door in
one's face, but whether because he did not know, or whether, knowing
the secret tradition, he was unable to tell more, who shall say? In
any case all are agreed as to the fascinating quality of his work, and
undoubtedly no one can read it without having his interest profoundly
stirred in these ancient cards.
It is generally supposed that they were unknown in France, or at
all events in Paris, prior to M. Court de Gebelin, who it is said,
found and introduced them to the French occultists. This, however, may
be doubted. I have in my possession a French Tarot of the early
eighteenth century, a very interesting feature of which is that some
of the cards have MS. inscriptions of their meaning, and apparently
the records of an experiment in divination, which from internal
evidence would seem to be Pre-Revolution. This. so far as it goes,
would support the theory that they were known in France before, M. de
Gebelin wrote about them. I would not, however, press this further
than as a warning against too confident dogmatism concerning the date
of the Tarot, and the history of its introduction into Europe.
The cards have been called the "Tarot of the Bohemians," and have
often been popularly spoken of as the gipsy fortune-telling cards. As
a fact, however, when gipsies lay the cards for the fortune of an
inquirer it is the ordinary pack that is used, and it seems certain,
as Mr. Waite points out, that the Tarot cards were known in Europe
before the arrival of the gipsies. Moreover gipsy folk-lorists, with
the exception of Vaillant, have very little to say about the Tarot.
The only evidence on this head that has come under my own
observation was from a woman of pure Romani blood, whom I knew many
years ago, a Mrs. Lee, but of what tribe I cannot say; she was reputed
to be an Epping Forest gipsy, but she said herself that her people
belonged to Norwood, and only left there when Norwood became a
wilderness of villadom, and their old haunts were desecrated by the
incursion of Cockney residents. She once showed me an old tattered and
much thumbed Tarot pack, of the ordinary Italian design, and told me
that these were the cards she used among her own people, but never for
Georgios. She also gave me the principles of interpretation, not under
any seal of secrecy, but with a general request that it should not be
published, and this, needless to say, I have honourably observed. I
may, however, state that it was a thoroughly logical and complete
system, the four suits representing the four elements, and the four
temperaments, and being judged according to their position. Thus wands
representing fire and the sanguine temperament, a wand card occurring
in a bad position would indicate danger from rash and hasty action,
anger, or quarrelling; the same card in a good position would show
noble and generous action, courage, energy, and the like. Curiously
enough the numbers of the pips were interpreted on a system very much
akin to the Pythagorean system of numbers, especially in regard to the
occult meaning of odd and even numbers. Mrs. Lee laid particular
stress on the arrangement of the pips on the cards, pointing out its
similarity to the arrangement of spots on dice and dominoes. (The
connection of this with the Pythagorean system is obvious.) In the
light of this explanation the appropriateness of the serpent in the
design of the two of pentacles is manifest.
Whether Mrs. Lee's explanations were common to the gipsy tribes,
or merely a system of her own, I cannot say. She seemed to regard it
as very private, and only shown to me as a special mark of favour.
The last time I saw Mrs. Lee was some twenty years ago at Yetholm,
when the son of the late Queen Esther was crowned Gipsy King. Mrs. Lee
was very contemptuous of the Yetholm gipsies- "Tinker trash," she said,
"not a hundred words of Romani among the lot." This, however, may well
have been the prejudice of a different tribe.
I was interested to find that what she told me of the Tarot was
well known to another friend of mine, the late Mrs. Florence Farr
Emery, who herself claimed Romani descent, and had a great store of
strange learning. She it was who first pointed out to me the
correspondence of the interpretations of the pip cards with the
Pythagorean system, greatly to my delight, for the meanings usually
ascribed to the cards had seemed merely empiric, and founded on no
system, as indeed are the meanings ascribed to cards by the ordinary
type of fortune-teller to-day. More doubtful were Mrs. Emery's
suggestions of Egyptian correspondences. She was a diligent student of
Egyptology, though perhaps not quite as much of an authority as her
friends claimed, and with natural enthusiasm was apt to see ancient
Egypt everywhere.
Another unexpected gleam of light came to me from a friend of the
late Charles Godfrey Leland, who told me that Leland had some special
knowledge of a peculiar system of Gipsy Cartomancy, which for reasons
known to himself he was not at liberty to divulge, and of a special
pack of cards used by them. The friend who told me this had never seen
the cards, but from the evidence of the Tarot pack shown me by Mrs.
Lee it seems more than likely that these were in fact the Tarot cards,
and that the interpretation thereof had been communicated as a secret
to Leland. So then there appears to be a probability, in spite of the
scepticism of the folk-lorists, that the connection of the Tarot with
the gipsies may have a solid foundation in fact, and on this also we
must await further evidence.
Meanwhile a guess may be hazarded that, although the cards arrived
in Europe before the gipsies, they may yet have a common origin. Both
the tribe and the cards arrived roughly about the same time, from an
utterly unknown and mysterious source; and though the cards arrived
first, there is no evidence to show that they did not come from the
same origin. This will be a problem for future investigators, and a
problem that I would humbly suggest is to be solved, not by negations,
but rather by careful and open-minded examination of all the minutest
traces of evidence available. It may be perfectly true to say there is
no evidence of the Egyptian origin either of the cards or the people.
But like other negations it takes us no farther. It may be right to
deprecate the hasty dogmatism and superstition of those who proclaim
loudly, on the very slenderest authority, that the secrets of the
Universe have been laid bare, and the key to universal knowledge is in
the hands of some certain mystic writer or teacher, who poses as a
divinely inspired final authority and revealer of mysteries. There be
many such nowadays, specially of the discredited German brand. But in
this deprecation we should beware of falling into the opposite error,
and because there is no proof, rashly assume that there is no
evidence. It is by the patient examination of minute, almost
invisible, and nearly obliterated traces, that true scientific
investigation triumphs at length. There are traces, faint arid
infinitesimal it is true, of an Egyptian origin both of the gipsies
and of the Tarot cards; and until some clearer indications of another
origin are discovered it is wisdom to preserve these, and make the
most of them, examine them with minutest care and search for others,
meantime not neglecting any other clues pointing in any other
direction. Above all, the careful examination of the designs of the
cards, from the very earliest that can be discovered, with all their
variants, must be an essential part of the inquiry. No good end can be
served by redrawing the cards, however skilfully or artistically it is
done. They will remain nothing but an evidence of the taste, and skill,
and opinions of the artist, or his inspirer. But anyone who can in any
way contribute to a reproduction of the original designs as they were,
not as he thinks they ought to be, will do a real service to the study
of the Tarot. Even the well-known and accepted symbols on the best of
the current packs, well-drawn and coloured, and well printed to
replace the crude and poor examples which are, the best we can get
now, would be a boon to Tarot students, and would demand neither
archaeological nor mystic learning.
In common with many Tarot students I welcomed Mr. Waite's little
manual, and found therein as I expected, and as one always expects
from his work, the results of careful research, set forth in graceful
and elegant diction, an invaluable summary for those who have not the
time or the patience, perhaps not the opportunity, to study the
original works, of which he gives an excellent bibliography. But after
all it carries one very little farther. En passant I was rather
surprised that he should have taken the swords of the Tarot as the
prototypes of clubs. So learned and accurate a writer must have had
some authority for this statement, but none is given, and the obvious
idea that in Italian swords is spadi, and the form of the pips in
modern cards suggest a conventionalized drawing of the Roman broad
sword, is not so much as alluded to. The original symbology as I have
said remains unknown, and is open to any conjecture, but it must be
said that the form of the club pip is singularly unlike a bludgeon or
quarter staff. But if we take the suit of denarii, or pentacles, to
represent earth forces, and suggest that money or coins might
symbolize material powers, and that the clover or trefoil leaf, as a
product of the earth, might also symbolize the earth forces, it might
be as good symbology as the derivation of bludgeons from swords. In
any case it seems to be generally assumed the cups are the prototypes
of hearts, and sceptres of diamonds, and if swords or spadi become
spades, there is only left the correspondence of Pentacles with modern
clubs.
There are then three ways in which we may regard the Tarot cards.
Firstly the most obvious, as implements of a game of chance or skill,
and this is only historically interesting. Secondly as a book of
hieroglyphics, revealing, if properly interpreted, some great mystic
truths. It may be some cosmogony, or history of evolution, either of
the universe, or the human soul. And thirdly as a means of divination.
Clearly the second of these depends entirely on our having the correct
order of the cards and as to this at present no light comes from
antiquity, and modern authorities differ, as we have seen. The third,
or divinatory use, depends on the chance laying down of the cards, the
order in which they turn up after certain prescribed shufflings and
cuttings by the querent. Mr. Waite inclines to the belief that the
series of 22 Atus, or Trumps, were solely referred to the second of
the above ways of regarding the cards and the 56 pip cards, which he
calls the lesser Arcana, were for no other use than for divination or
fortune telling. This may be correct. Certainly there are examples of
the Atus alone without the pip cards, and there are packs of pip cards
sold now in Italy for the playing of Tarochi with no Atus. Yet there
are early examples in Mr. Clulow's collection of packs containing
both, and clearly related. One form at least of the game is played
with both, the Atus have a very special power justifying their name of
trumps; and certainly also the system of divination shown to me by
Mrs. Lee made use of both. I can only say that after examining all the
evidence- that cited by Mr. Waite as well as some others- I have
myself come to a different conclusion, but I consider the point still
open to investigation.
As to divination or fortune-telling, there are many ways of
laying out the cards; I have myself been shown over a dozen, and I am
persuaded there are many more, some of them peculiar to individual
diviners. The first method described by Mr. Waite has long been
familiar to me. It was sometimes used among others by Mrs. Florence
Farr Emery, but the divinatory meanings were entirely dificrent.
Rightly or wrongly they were logically formed by the combination of
the general meaning of the suit with the mystic properties of numbers,
which Mr. Waite apparently disregards. This divinatory meaning is
broadly borne out by the old symbolic designs. The theory, therefore,
is that the Tarot was in its origin a symbolic book, whose meaning can
now only be remotely guessed at; that the original designers worked
upon the fourfold division of all created things, whereof well-known
examples are the four beasts of Ezekiel's vision, and of the
Apocalypse, the four cherubim, the four archangels, the four letters
of tetragrammaton, and many others; to which they added the mystic
virtues of numbers, and upon each page of the book they placed a
symbolic design still further to elucidate it. Each page on this
theory would in fact form a chapter in the book, describing the good
and evil influences operating from the spiritual on the material
world. By the theory of divination the process of shuffling and
cutting the cards according to the prescribed method would indicate
the influences operating on the querent. We may perhaps compare the
symbolic designs to the vignettes illustrating chapters in the
Egyptian Book of the Dead.
If this theory is in any way correct it is obvious that it is of
supreme importance to preserve by all means the ancient symbolic
designs, and if possible to restore them to the state in which the
original designers intended to set them forth. Archaeological research
is continually bringing to light new and unexpected discoveries, and
it may well he that any day some fresh evidence may be forthcoming on
the forms of the Tarot, before the earliest that are now known,
evidence that perhaps will without doubt connect these mysterious
cards with one or other of the great races of antiquity and the great
systems of philosophy or prove the fallacy of this idea. I trust that
Mr. Waite may some day find time to tell us from whence he derived his
interpretations, and the designs illustrating them.
Taking as an example the two of pentacles, of which I have spoken
before. Pentacles represent the earth forces- the material influences
ruling our mortal life- and two according to the Pythagoreans is the
number of divided councils, of Good and Evil, the first number to
separate itself from the divine unity, hence associated with the dual
nature of the serpent, or the two serpents, the serpent of the
temptation, and the brazen serpent of healing lifted up by Moses in
the wilderness, which was a type of Christ. Appropriately then in the
old designs is the two of pentacles illustrated by the serpent coiled
in the symbol of infinity. The interpretation may be true or false, I
claim no special inspiration for it. It is merely a suggesijon. But
from whence comes Mr. Waite's dancing man? If he belongs to any of the
old forms of the Tarot, or is in any way connected with the original
designers, he is worthy of serious consideration. But one would like
to know his origin and credentials. And thie same remark applies to
the other designs.
I am aware that my contribution is exceedingly small, but in
tracing a path so obscure the faintest gleam of light may be of great
value. I wholly agree with Mr. Waite in deprecating the attitude of
those who assume a mighty air of mystery, and hint that an they would
they could tell much. This is not the attitude of the real occult
student. Those who know the secret tradition (supposing there is one)
should either set forth their knowledge, if they may, and are not
restrained by any pledges or honourable understanding, or should be
silent; and those who have any interpretation to give should give
their authority, or if the source be their own intuition or
clairvoyance, should frankly say so. If all commentators would follow
these simple rules of scientific investigation, we might be nearer to
solving the two mysteries of the origin of the Tarot cards, and the
origin of the gipsies, and either proving or disproving their alleged
connection.
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Scanned from the periodical "The Occult Review", Vol. XXIX, No. 2;
Feb., 1919. Formatted and corrected by hand.