Chapter 23
Section 9
THE METHOD OF READING BY MEANS OF THIRTY-FIVE CARDS
When the reading is over, according to the scheme set forth in the last method, it may happen — as in the previous case — that something remains doubtful, or it may be desired to carry the question further, which is done as follows:
Take up the undealt cards which remain over, not having been used in the first operation with 42 cards. The latter are set aside in a heap, with the Querent, face upwards, on the top. The thirty-five cards, being shuffled and cut as before, are divided by dealing into six packets thus : —
Packet I consists of the first Seven Cards ; Packet II consists of the Six Cards next following in order; Packet III consists of the Five Cards following; Packet IV contains the next Four Cards ; Packet V contains Two Cards : and Packet VI contains the last Eleven Cards. The arrangement will then be as follows : —
Packet VI.
Packet
V.
Packet IV.
Packet III.
Packet II.
Packet I.
cards
3 cards
4 cards
5 cards
6
cards
7 cards
Take up these packets successively; deal out the cards which they contain in six lines, which will be necessarily of unequal length.
The First Line stands for the house, the environment and so forth.
The Second Line stands for the person or subject of the divination.
The Third Line stands for what is passing outside, events, persons, etc.
The Fourth Line stands for a surprise, the unexpected, etc.
The Fifth Line stands for consolation, and may moderate all that is unfavorable in the preceding lines.
OUTER METHOD OF THE ORACLES. 163
The Sixth Line is that which must be consulted to elucidate the enigmatic oracles of the others; apart from them it has no importance. •
These cards should all be read from left to right, beginning with the uppermost line.
It should be stated in conclusion as to this divinatory part that there is no method of interpreting Tarot cards which is not ap- plicable to ordinary playing-cards, but the additional court cards, and above all the Trumps INIajor, are held to increase the elements and values of the oracles.
And now in conclusion as to the whole matter, I have left for these last words — as if b)^ way of epilogue — one further and final point. It is the sense in which I regard the Trumps Major as containing Secret Doctrine. I do not here mean that I am acquainted with orders and fraternities in which such doctrine reposes and is there found to be part of higher Tarot knowledge. I do not mean that such doctrine, being so preserved and trans- mitted, can be constructed as imbedded independently in the Trumps Major. I do not mean that it is something apart from_ the Tarot. Associations exist which have special knowledge of both kinds ; some of it is deduced from the Tarot and some of it is apart therefrom ; in either case, it is the same in the root-matter. But there are also things in reserve which are not in orders or societies, but are transmitted after another manner. Apart from all inheritance of this kind, let any one who is a mystic consider separately and in combination the Magician, the Fool, the High Priestess, the Hierophant, the Empress, the Emperor, the Hanged Man and the Tower. Let him then consider the card called the Last Judgment. They contain the legend of the soul. The other Trumps Major are the details and — as one might say — the acci- dents. Perhaps such a person will begin to understand what lies far behind these symbols, by whomsoever first invented and how- ever preserved. If he does, he will see also why I have concerned myself with the subject, even at the risk of writing about divina- tion by cards.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
A Concise Bibliography Of The Chief Works Dealing With The Tarot And Its Connections
As in spite of its modest pretensions, this monograph is, so far as I am aware, the first attempt to provide in EngHsh a com- plete synoptic account of the Tarot, with its archaeological position defined, its available symbolism developed, and — as a matter of curiosity in occultism — with its divinatory meanings and modes of operation sufficiently exhibited, it is my wish, from the literate standpoint, to enumerate those text-books of the subject, and the most important incidental references thereto, which have come under my notice. The biliographical particulars that follow lay no claim to completeness, as I have cited nothing that I have not seen with my own eyes; but I can understand that most of my readers will be surprised at the extent of the literature — if I may so term it conventionally — which has grown up in the course of the last I20 years. Those who desire to pursue their inquiries further will find ample materials herein, though it is not a course which I am seeking to commend especially, as I deem that enough has been said upon the Tarot in this place to stand for all that has preceded it. The bibliography itself is representative after a similar manner. I should add that there is a considerable cata- logue of cards and works on card-playing in the British Museum, but I have not had occasion to consult it to any extent for the purposes of the present list.
Monde Prhnitif, analyse et compare avec le Monde Moderne. Par M. Court de Gebelin. Vol. 8, 4to, Paris, 1781. The articles on the Jcti des Tarots will be found at pp. 365 to 410. The plates at the end show the Trumps Major and the Aces of each suit. These are valuable as indications of the cards at the close of the eighteenth century. They were presumably then in circulation in the South of France, as it is said that at the period
164
BIBLIOGRAPHY. 165
in question they were practically unknown at Paris. I have dealt with the claims of the papers in the body of the present work. Their speculations were tolerable enough for their mazy period; but that they are suffered still, and accepted indeed without ques- tion, by French occult writers is the most convincing testimony that one can need to the qualifications of the latter for dealing with any question of historical research.
II
The Works of Etteilla. Les Septs Nuances de Vceuvre philoso- phique Hermetique; Maniere de se recrcer avec le Jeu de Cartes, nominees Tarots; Fragments stir les Hautes Sci- ences; Philosophie des Hautes Sciences; Jeu des Tarots, ou le Livre de Thoth; Lecons Theoriques et Pratiques dii Livre de Thoth — all published between 1783 and 1787. These are exceedingly rare and were frankly among the works of colportage of their particular period. They contain the most curious fragments on matters within and without the main issue, lucubrations on genii, magic, astrology, talismans, dreams, etc. I have spoken sufficiently in the text on the author's views on the Tarot and his place in its modern history. He regarded it as a work of speaking hieroglyphics, but to translate it was not easy. He, however, accomplished the task — that is to say, in his own opinion.
Ill
An Inquiry into the Ancient Greek Game, supposed to have been
invented by Palamedes. [By James Christie.] London:
4to, 1 80 1.
I mention this collection of curious dissertations because it has
been cited by waiters on the Tarot. It seeks to establish a close
connection between early games of antiquity and modern chess.
It is suggested that the invention attributed to Palamedes, prior
to the Siege of Troy, was known in China from a more remote
period of antiquity. The work has no reference to cards of any
kind whatsoever.
IV
Researches into the History of Playing Cards. By Samuel Wel- ler Singer. 4to, London, 1816. The Tarot is probably of Eastern origin and high antiquity, but the rest of Court de Gebelin's theory is vague and unfounded.
166 ILLUSTRATED KEY TO THE TAROT.
Cards were known in Europe prior to the appearance of the Egyptians. The work has a good deal of curious information and the appendices are vakiable, but the Tarot occupies comparatively little of the text and the period is too early for a tangible criti- cism of its claims. There are excellent reproductions of early specimen designs. Those of Court de Gebelin are also given in extenso.
V
Facts and Speculations on Playing Cards. By W. A. Chatto. 8vo, London, 1848. The author suggested that the Trumps Major and the numeral cards were once sieparate, but were afterwards combined. The oldest specimens of Tarot cards are not later than 1440. But the claims and value of the volume have been sufficiently described in the text.
VI
Les Cartes a Jouer et la Cartomancie. Par D. R. P. Boiteau d'Ambly. 4to, Paris, 1854. There are some interesting illustrations of early Tarot cards, which are said to be of Oriental origin ; but they are not referred to Egypt. The early gipsy connection is affirmed, but there is no evidence produced. The cards came with the gipsies from India, where they were designed to show forth the intentions of "the unknown divinity" rather than to be the servants of profane amusement.
VII
Dogme et Rituel de la Haute Magie. Par filiphas Levi, 2 vols., demy 8vo, Paris, 1854. This is the first publication of Alphonse Louis Constant on occult philosophy, and it is also his magnufn opus. It is con- structed in both volumes on the major Keys of the Tarot and has been therefore understood as a kind of development of their implicits, in the way that these were presented to the mind of the author. To supplement what has been said of this work in the text of the present monograph, I need only add that the section on transmutations in the second volume contains what is termed the Key of Thoth. The inner circle depicts a triple Tau, with a hexagram where the bases join, and beneath is the Ace of
BIBLIOGRAPHY. 167
Cups. Within the external circle are the letters TARO, and about this figure as a whole are grouped the symbols of the Four Living Creatures, the Ace of Wands, Ace of Swords, the letter Shin, and a magician's candle, which is identical, according to Levi, with the lights used in the Goetic Circle of Black Evocations and Pacts. The triple Tau may be taken to represent the Ace of Pentacles. The only Tarot card given in the volumes is the Chariot, which is drawn by two sphinxes ; the fashion thus set has been followed in later days. Those who interpret the work as a kind of commentary on the Trumps Major are the conven- tional occult students and those who follow them will have only the pains of fools.
VIII
Les Romes. Par J. A. Vaillant. Demy 8vo, Paris, 1857.
The author tells us how he met with the cards, but the account is in a chapter of anecdotes. The Tarot is the sidereal book of Enoch, modelled on the astral wheel of Athor. There is a de- scription of the Trumps Major, which are evidently regarded as an heirloom, brought by the gipsies from Indo-Tartary. The publication of Levi's Dogme et Rituel must, I think, have im- pressed Vaillant very much, and although in this, which was the writer's most important work, the anecdote that I have men- tioned is practically his only Targt reference, he seems to have gone much further in a later publication — Clef Magique de la Fiction et dn Fait, but I have not been able to see it, nor do I think, from the reports concerning it, that I have sustained a loss.
IX
Historie de la Magie. Par filiphas Levi. 8vo, Paris, i860.
The references to the Tarot are few in this brilliant work, which will be available shortly in English. It gives the 21st Trump Major, commonly called the Universe, or World, under the title of Yinx Pantomorphe — a seated figure wearing the crown of Isis. This has been reproduced by Papus in Le Tarot Divinatoire. The author explains that the extant Tarot has come down to us through the Jews, but it passed somehow into the hands of the gipsies, who brought it with them when they first entered France in the early part of the fifteenth century. The authority here is Vaillant.
168 ILLUSTRATED KEY TO THE TAROT.
X
La Clef des Grands Mysteres. Par filiphas Levi, 8vo, Paris, 1861. The frontispiece to this work represents the absolute Key of the occult sciences, given by William Postel and completed by the writer. It is reproduced in The Tarot Of The Bohemians, and in the preface which I have prefixed thereto, as indeed elsewhere, I have explained that Postel never constructed a hieroglyphical key. filiphas Levi indentifies the Tarot as that sacred alphabet which has been variously referred to Enoch, Thoth, Cadmus and Palamedes. It consists of absolute ideas attached to signs and numbers. In respect of the latter, there is an extended commen- tary on these as far as the number 19, the series being inter- preted as the Keys of Occult Theology. The remaining three numerals which complete the Hebrew alphabet are called the Keys of Nature. The Tarot is said to be the original of Chess, as it is also of the Ro,yal Game of Goose. This volume contains the author's hypothetical reconstruction of the tenth Trump Major, showing Egyptian figures on the Wheel of Fortune.
XI
UHomme Rouge des Tiiileries. Par P. Christian. Fcap. 8vo, Paris, 1863. The work is exceedingly rare, is much sought and was once highly, prized in France; but Dr. Papus has awakened to the fact: that it is really of slender value, and the statement might be extended. It is interesting, however, as containing the writer's first reveries on the Tarot. He was a follower and imitator of Levi. In the present work, he provides a commentary on the Trumps Major and thereafter the designs and meanings of all the Minor Arcana. There are many and curious astrological attributions. The work does not seem to mention the Tarot by name. A later Histoire de la Magie does little more than repro- duce and extend the account of the Trumps Major given herein,
XII
The History of Playing Cards. By E. S. Taylor. Cr. 8vo. I>on- don, 1865. This was published posthumously and is practically a transla- tion of Boiteau. It therefore calls for little remark on my part. The opinion is that cards were imported by the gipsies from
BIBLIOGRAPHY. 169
India. There are also references to the so-called Chinese Tarot, which was mentioned by Court de Gebelin.
«
XIII
Origine des Cartes a Jouer. Par Romain Merlin. 4to, Paris, 1869. There is no basis for the Egyptian origin of the Tarot, except in the imagination of Court de Gebelin. I have mentioned other- wise that the writer disposes to his personal satisfaction, of the gipsy hypothesis, and he does the same in respect of the im- puted connection with India ; he says that cards were known in Europe before communication was opened generally with that world about 1494. But if the gipsies were a Pariah tribe already dwelling in the West, and if the cards were a part of their bag- gage, there is nothing in this contention. The whole question is essentially one of speculation.
XIV
The Platonist. Vol. II, pp. 126-8. Published at St. Louis, Mo., U.S.A., 1884-5. Royal 4to. This periodical, the suspension of which must have been re- gretted by many admirers of an unselfish and laborious effort, contained one anonymous article on the Tarot by a writer with theosophical tendencies, and considerable pretensions to knowl- edge. It has, however, by its own evidence, strong titles to negligence, and is indeed a ridiculous performance. The word Tarot is the Latin i?o^a=wheel, transposed. The system was invented at a remote period in India, presumably — for the writer is vague — about b. c. 300. The Fool represents the primordial chaos. The Tarot is now used by Rosicrucian adepts, but in spite of the inference that it may have come down to them from their German progenitors in the early seventeenth century, and not- withstanding the source in India, the twenty-two keys were pictured on the walls of Egyptian temples dedicated to the mys- teries of initiation. Some of this rubbish is derived from P. Christian, but the following statement is peculiar, I think, to the writer : "It is known to adepts that there should be twenty- two esoteric keys, which would make the total number up to 100." Persons who reach a certain stage of lucidity have only to provide blank pasteboards of the required number and the missing designs will be furnished by superior intelligences.
170 ILLUSTRATED KEY TO THE TAROT.
Meanwhile, America is still awaiting the fulfilment of the con- cluding forecast, that some few will ere long have so far devel- oped in that country "as to be able to read perfectly ... in that perfect and divine sybilline work, the Taro." Perhaps the cards which accompany the present volume will give the opportunity and the impulse !
XV
Lo Joch de Naips. Per Joseph Brunet y Belief. Cr. 8vo, Barce- lona, 1886. With reference to the dream of Egyptian origin, the author quotes E. Garth Wilkinson's Manners and Customs of the' Egyptians as negative evidence at least that cards were unknown in the old cities of the Delta. The history of the subject is sketched, following the chief authorities, but without reference to exponents of the occult schools. The mainstay throughout is Chatto. There are some interesting particulars about the pro- hibition of cards in Spain, and the appendices include a few valuable documents, by one of which it appears, as already men- tioned, that St. Bernardin of Sienna preached against games in general, and cards in particular, so far back as 1423. There are illustrations of rude Tarots, including a curious example of an Ace of Cups, with a phoenix rising therefrom, and a Queen of Cups, from whose vessel issues a flower.
XVI
The Tarot: Its Occult Significance, Use in Fortune-Telling, and Method of Play. By S. L. MacGregor Mathers. Sq. i6mo, London, 1888. This booklet was designed to accompany a set of Tarot cards, and the current packs of the period were imported from abroad for the purpose. There is no pretense of original research, and the only personal opinion expressed by the writer or calling for notice here states that the Trumps Major are hierogylphic sym- bols corresponding to the occult meanings of the Hebrew alpha- bet. Here the authority is Levi, from whom is also derived the brief symbolism allocated to the twenty-two Keys. The diyina- tory meanings follow, and then t-he modes of operation. It is a mere sketch written in a pretentious manner and is negligible in all respects.
BIBLIOGRAPHY. 171
XVII
Traite Methodique de Science Occulte. Par Papus. 8vo, Paris, 1891. The rectified Tarot published by Oswald Wirth after the in- dications of Eliphas Levi is reproduced in this work, which — it may be mentioned — extends to nearly 1,100 pages. There is a section on the gipsies, considered as the importers of esoteric tradition into Europe by means of the cards. The Tarot is a combination of numbers and ideas, whence its correspondence with the Hebrew alphabet. Unfortunately, the Hebrew citations are rendered almost unintelligible by innumerable typographical errors.
XVIII
Eliphas Levi: Le Liwe des Splendeurs. Demy 8vo, Paris, 1894. A section on the Elements of the .Kabalah affirms (a) That the Tarot contains in the several cards of the four suits a four- fold explanation of the numbers i to 10; {h) that the symbols which we now have only in the form of cards were at first medals and then afterwards became talismans; (c) that the Tarot is the hieroglyphical book of the Thirty-two Paths of Kabalistic theosophy, and that its summary explanation is in the Sepher Yetzirah; (d) that it is the inspiration of all religious theories and symbols; (e) that its emblems are found on the ancient monuments of Egypt. With the historical value of these preten- sions I have dealt in the text.
XIX
Clefs Magiques et Clavicides de Salomon. Par ]61iphas Levi. Sq. i2mo, Paris, 1895. The Keys in question are said to have been restored in i860, in their primitive purity, by means of hieroglyphical signs and numbers, without any admixture of Samaritan or Egyptian images. There are rude designs of the Hebrew letters attributed to the Trumps Major, with meanings — most of which are to be found in other works by the same writer. There are also com- binations of the letters which enter into the Divine Name ; these combinations are attributed to the court cards of the Lesser Ar- cana. Certain talismans of spirits are in fine furnished with Tarot attributions ; the Ace of Clubs corresponds to the Deiis Absconditus, the First Principle. The httle book was issued at a
172 ILLUSTRATED KEY TO THE TAROT.
high price and as something that should be reserved to adepts, or those on the path of adeptship, but it is really without value — symbolical or otherwise.
XX
Les xxii Lames Hermetiques du Tarot Diviitatoire. Par R. Fal- connier. Demy 8vo, Paris, 1896. The word Tarot comes from the Sanskrit and means "fixed star," which in its turn signifies immutable tradition, theosophical synthesis, symbolism of primitive dogma, etc. Graven on golden plates, the designs were used by Hermes Trismegistus and their mysteries were only revealed to the highest grades of the priest- hood of Isis. It is unnecessary therefore to say that the Tarot is of Egyptian origin and the work of M. Falconnier has been to reconstruct its primitive form, which he does by reference to the monuments — that is to say, after the fashion of filiphas Levi, he draws the designs of the Trumps Major in imitation of Egyptian art. This production has been hailed by French occultists as presenting the Tarot in its perfection, but the same has been said of the designs of Oswald Wirth, which are quite unlike and not Egyptian at all. To be frank, these kinds of foolery may be as much as can be expected from the Sanctuary of the Comedie- Francaise, to which the author belongs, and it should be reserved thereto.
XXI
The Magical Ritual of the Sanctum Regnum, interpreted by the Tarot Trumps. Translated from the MSS. of filiphas Levi and edited by W. Wynn Westcott, M.B. Fcap, 8vo, London, 1896. It is necessary to say that the interest of this memorial rests rather in the fact of its existence than in its intrinsic importance. There is a kind of informal commentary on the Trum.ps Major, or rather there are considerations which presumably had arisen therefrom in the mind of the French author. For example, the card called Fortitude is an opportunity for expatiation on will as the secret of strength. The Hanged Man is said to represent the completion of the Great Work. Death suggests a diatribe against Necromancy and Goetia; but such phantoms have no existence in "the Sanctutn Regnuni" of life. Temperance pro- duces only a few vapid commonplaces, and the Devil, which is blind force, is the occasion for repetition of much that has been said already in the earlier works of Levi. The Tower repre-
BIBLIOGRAPHY. 173
sents the betrayal of the Great Arcanum, and this it was which caused the sword of Samael to be stretched over the Garden of Dehght. Amongat the plates there is a monogram of the Gnosis, which is also that of the Tarot. The editor has thoughtfully ap- pended some information on the Trump Cards taken from the early works of Levi and from the commentaries of P. Christian.
XXII
Comment on devient Alchimiste. Par F. Joiivet de Castellct. Sq. 8vo, Paris, 1897. Herein is a summary of the Alchemical Tarot, which — with all my respect for innovations and inventions — seems to be high fan- tasy; but Etteilla had reveries of this kind, and if it should ever be warrantable to produce a Key Major in place of the present Key Minor, it might be worth while to tabulate the analogies of these strange dreams. At the moment it will be sufficient to say that there is given a schedule of the alchemical correspondences to the Trumps Major, by which it appears that the Juggler or Magician symbolizes attractive force ; the High Priestess is inert matter, than which nothing is more false ; the Pope is the Quintessence, which — if he were only acquainted with Shake- speare— might tempt the present successor of St. Peter to re- peat that "there are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio." The Devil, on the other hand, is the matter of philosophy at the black stage; the Last Judgment is the red stage of the Stone; the Fool is its fermentation ; and, in fine, the last card, or the World, is the Alchemical Absolute — the Stone itself. If this should encourage my readers, they may note further that the particulars of various chemical combinations can be developed by means of the Lesser Arcana, if these are laid out for the purpose. Specifically, the King of Wands = Gold; the Pages or Knaves represent animal substances ; the King of Cups = Sil- ver ; and so forth.
XXIII
Le Grand Arcane, ou Voccultisme deroile. Par l&liphas Levi. Demy Svo, Paris, 1898. After many years and the long experience of all his concerns in occultism, the author at length reduces his message to one formula in this work. I speak, of course, only in respect of the Tarot: he says that the cards of Etteilla produce a kind of hyp- notism in the seer or seeress who divines thereby. The folly of
174 ILLUSTRATED KEY TO THE TAROT.
the psychic reads in the folly of the querent. Did he counsel honesty, it is suggested that he would lose his clients. I have written severe criticisms on occult arts and sciences, but this is astonishing from one of their past professors and, moreover, I think that tlie psychic occasionally is a psychic and sees in a manner as such.
XXIV
Le Serpent de la Gcncse — Livre II; La Clef de la Magie Noire. Par Stanislas de Guaita. 8vo, Paris, 1902. It is a vast commentary on the second septenary of the Trumps Major. Justice signifies equilibrium and its agent ; the Hermit typifies the mysteries of solitude; the Wheel of Fortune is the circulus of becoming or attaining; Fortitude signifies the power resident in will ; the Hanged Man is magical bondage, which speaks volumes for the clouded and inverted insight of this fan- tasiast in occultism : Death is, of course, that which its name sig- nifies, but with reversion to the second death ; Temperance means the magic of transformations, and therefore suggests excess rather than abstinence. There is more of the same kind of thing — I believe — in the first book, but this will serve as a speci- men. The demise of Stanislas de Guaita put an end to his scheme of interpreting the Tarot Trumps, but it should be under- stood that the connection is shadowy and that actual references could be reduced to a very few pages.
XXV
Le Tarot: Apergu historique. Par. J. J. Bourgeat. Sq. i2mo, Paris, 1906. The author has illustrated his work by purely fantastic de- signs of certain Trumps Major, as, for example, the Wheel of Fortune, Death and the Devil. They have no connection with symbolism The Tarot is said to have originated in India, whence it passed to Egypt, filiphas Levi, P. Christian, and J. A. Vaillant are cited in support of statements and points of view. The mode of divination adopted is fully and carefully set out.
XXVI
L'Art de tirer les Cartes. Par Antonio Magus. Cr. 8vo, Paris, n.d. (about 1908). This is not a work of any especial pretension, nor has it any title to consideration on account of its modesty. Frankly, it is
BIBLIOGRAPHY. 175
little — if any — better than a bookseller's experiment. There is a summary account of the chief methods of divination, derived from familiar sources ; there is a history of cartomancy in France; and there are indifferent reproductions of Etteilla Tarot cards, with his meanings and the well-known mode of operation. Finally, there is a section on common fortune-telling- by a piquet set of ordinary cards : this seems to lack the only merit that it might have possessed, namely, perspicuity ; but I speak with re- serve, as I am not perhaps a judge possessing ideal qualifications in matters of this kind. In any case, the question signifies nothing. It is just to add that the concealed author maintains what he terms the Egyptian tradition of the Tarot, which is the Great Book of Thoth. But there is a light accent throughout his thesis, and it does not follow that he took the claim seriously.
XXVII
Le Tarot Dknnatoire : Clef du tirage des cartes et des sorts. Par le Dr. Papus. Demy. 8vo, Paris, 1909. The text is accompanied by what is termed a complete recon- stitution of all the symbols, which means that in this manner we have yet another Tarot. The Trumps Major follow the tradi- tional lines, with various explanations and attributions on the margins, and this plan obtains throughout the series. From the draughtsman's point of view, it must be said that the designs are indifferently done, and the reproductions seem worse than the designs. This is probably of no especial importance to the class of readers addressed. Dr. Papus also presents, by way of curious memorials, the evidential value of which he seems to accept implicitly, certain unpublished designs of filiphas Levi; they are certainly interesting as examples of the manner in which the great occultist manufactured the archaeology of the Tarot to bear out his personal views. We have (c) Trump Major, No. 5, being Horus as the Grand Hierophant; drawn after the monuments; (b) Trump Major No. 2, being the High Priestess as Isis, also after the monuments; and (c) five imag- inary specimens of an Indian Tarot. This is how la haute science in France contributes to the illustration of that work which Dr. Papus terms /iW^ de la science eternelle; it would be called by rougher names in English criticism. The editor himself takes his usual pains and believes that he has discovered the time at- tributed to each card by ancient Egypt. He applies it to the purpose of divination, so that the skilful fortune-teller can now
176 ILLUSTRATED KEY TO THE TAROT.
predict the hour and the day when the dark young man will meet with the fair widow, and so forth.
XXVIII
Le Tarot des Bohemiens. Par Papus. 8vo, Paris, 1889. Eng- lish Translation, second edition, 1910. An exceedingly complex work, which claims to present an ab- solute key to occult science. It was translated into English by Mr. A. P. Morton in 1896, and this version has been re-issued recently under my own supervision. The preface which I have prefixed thereto contains all that it is necessary to say regarding its claims, and it should be certainly consulted by readers of the present Pictorial Key to the Tarot. The fact that Papus regards the great sheaf of hieroglyphics as "the most ancient
