By Arthur Edward Waite
The pathology of the poet says that "the undevout astronomer is mad"; the
pathology of the very plain man says that genius is mad; and between these
extremes, which stand for ten thousand analogous excesses, the sovereign reason
takes the part of a moderator and does what it can. I do not think that there is
a pathology of the occult dedications, but about their extravagances no one can
question, and it is not less difficult than thankless to act as a moderator
regarding them. Moreover, the pathology, if it existed, would probably be an
empiricism rather than a diagnosis, and would offer no criterion. Now, occultism
is not like mystic faculty, and it very seldom works in harmony either with
business aptitude in the things of ordinary life or with a knowledge of the
canons of evidence in its own sphere. I know that for the high art of ribaldry
there are few things more dull than the criticism which maintains that a thesis
is untrue, and cannot understand that it is decorative. I know also that after
long dealing with doubtful doctrine or with difficult research it is always
refreshing, in the domain of this art, to meet with what is obviously of fraud
or at least of complete unreason. But the aspects of history, as seen through
the lens of occultism, are not as a rule decorative, and have few gifts of
refreshment to heal the lacerations which they inflict on the logical
understanding. It almost requires a Frater Sapiens dominabitur astris in
the Fellowship of the Rosy Cross to have the patience which is not lost amidst
clouds of folly when the consideration of the Tarot is undertaken in accordance
with the higher law of symbolism. The true Tarot is symbolism; it speaks no
other language and offers no other signs. Given the inward meaning of its
emblems, they do become a kind of alphabet which is capable of indefinite
combinations and makes true sense in all. On the highest plane it offers a key
to the Mysteries, in a manner which is not arbitrary and has not been read in,
But the wrong symbolical stories have been told concerning it, and the wrong
history has been given in every published work which so far has dealt with the
subject. It has been intimated by two or three writers that, at least in respect
of the meanings, this is unavoidably the case, because few are acquainted with
them, while these few hold by transmission under pledges and cannot betray their
trust. The suggestion is fantastic on the surface for there seems a certain
anti-climax in the proposition that a particular interpretation of
fortune-telling--l'art de tirer les cartes--can be reserved for Sons of
the Doctrine. The fact remains, notwithstanding, that a Secret Tradition exists
regarding the Tarot, and as there is always the possibility that some minor
arcana of the Mysteries may be made public with a flourish of trumpets, it will
be as well to go before the event and to warn those who are curious in such
matters that any revelation will contain only a third part of the earth and sea
and a third part of the stars of heaven in respect of the symbolism. This is for
the simple reason that neither in root-matter nor in development has more been
put into writing, so that much will remain to be said after any pretended
unveiling. The guardians of certain temples of initiation who keep watch over
mysteries of this order have therefore no cause for alarm.
In my preface to The Tarot of the Bohemians, which, rather by an accident of things, has recently come to be re-issued after a long period, I have said what was then possible or seemed most necessary. The present work is designed more especially--as I have intimated--to introduce a rectified set of the cards themselves and to tell the unadorned truth concerning them, so far as this is possible in the outer circles. As regards the sequence of greater symbols, their ultimate and highest meaning lies deeper than the common language of picture or hieroglyph. This will be understood by those who have received some part of the Secret Tradition. As regards the verbal meanings allocated here to the more important Trump Cards, they are designed to set aside the follies and impostures of past attributions, to put those who have the gift of insight on the right track, and to take care, within the limits of my possibilities, that they are the truth so far as they go.
It is regrettable in several respects that I must confess to certain reservations, but there is a question of honor at issue. Furthermore, between the follies on the one side of those who know nothing of the tradition, yet are in their own opinion the exponents of something called occult science and philosophy, and on the other side between the make-believe of a few writers who have received part of the tradition and think that it constitutes a legal title to scatter dust in the eyes of the world without, I feel that the time has come to say what it is possible to say, so that the effect of current charlatanism and unintelligence may be reduced to a minimum.
We shall see in due course that the history of Tarot cards is largely of a negative kind, and that, when the issues are cleared by the dissipation of reveries and gratuitous speculations expressed in the terms of certitude, there is in fact no history prior to the fourteenth century. The deception and self-deception regarding their origin in Egypt, India or China put a lying spirit into the mouths of the first expositors, and the later occult writers have done little more than reproduce the first false testimony in the good faith of an intelligence unawakened to the issues of research. As it so happens, all expositions have worked within a very narrow range, and owe, comparatively speaking, little to the inventive faculty. One brilliant opportunity has at least been missed, for it has not so far occurred to any one that the Tarot might perhaps have done duty and even originated as a secret symbolical language of the Albigensian sects. I commend this suggestion to the lineal descendants in the spirit of Gabriele Rossetti and Eugène Aroux, to Mr. Harold Bayley as another New Light on the Renaissance, and as a taper at least in the darkness which, with great respect, might be serviceable to the zealous and all-searching mind of Mrs. Cooper-Oakley. Think only what the supposed testimony of watermarks on paper might gain from the Tarot card of the Pope or Hierophant, in connection with the notion of a secret Albigensian patriarch, of which Mr. Bayley has found in these same watermarks so much material to his purpose. Think only for a moment about the card of the High Priestess as representing the Albigensian church itself; and think of the Tower struck by Lightning as typifying the desired destruction of Papal Rome, the city on the seven hills, with the pontiff and his temporal power cast down from the spiritual edifice when it is riven by the wrath of God. The possibilities are so numerous and persuasive that they almost deceive in their expression one of the elect who has invented them. But there is more even than this, though I scarcely dare to cite it. When the time came for the Tarot cards to be the subject of their first formal explanation, the archaeologist Court de Gebelin reproduced some of their most important emblems, and--if I may so term it--the codex which he used has served--by means of his engraved plates-as a basis of reference for many sets that have been issued subsequently. The figures are very primitive and differ as such from the cards of Etteilla, the Marseilles Tarot, and others still current in France. I am not a good judge in such matters, but the fact that every one of the Trumps Major might have answered for watermark purposes is shown by the cases which I have quoted and by one most remarkable example of the Ace of Cups.
I should call it an Eucharistic emblem after the manner of a ciborium, but this does not signify at the moment. The point is that Mr. Harold Bayley gives six analogous devices in his New Light on the Renaissance, being watermarks on paper of the seventeenth century, which he claims to be of Albigensian origin and to represent sacramental and Grail emblems. Had he only heard of the Tarot, had he known that these cards of divination, cards of fortune, cards of all vagrant arts, were perhaps current at the period in the South of France, I think that his enchanting but all too fantastic hypothesis might have dilated still more largely in the atmosphere of his dream. We should no doubt have had a vision of Christian Gnosticism, Manichaeism, and all that he understands by pure primitive Gospel, shining behind the pictures.
I do not look through such glasses, and I can only commend the subject to his attention at a later period; it is mentioned here that I may introduce with an unheard-of wonder the marvels of arbitrary speculation as to the history of the cards.
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Original text by A. E. Waite. This edited text © 2005-2006. Please note: all applicable material on this website is protected by copyright law and may not be copied without express written permission.

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