
"The Hierophant" number Five (V) Aleister Crowley's (d1947) Thoth Tarot cards has been so far, with my analysis and reading of the Thoth tarot, challenging to decipher and claim as my own. Although, I have been able to create my readings from the Thoth cards to date, yet for this to occur I had to study the background of each of the cards, which, in all said and done holds an overall tedium. Within the context that Crowley's drug use is all over these cards, more so amhpetemes and cocaine, that turns the user into a rambling fool. And let alone the creative, if one chooses to embark on an amphetamine drug binge to create art and ideas. Drug taking, if not confined to ritual of discipline to understand spirituality and the human condition, then the erratic overrides sensibilities, and Crowley was notorious in that sense. And unfortunately, as knowledgeable Crowley was of the occult, his mishmash of idealisms and esoteric teachings, become magnified on certain cards, such as The Hierophant.
So, let's break it down. "The Hierophant" Thoth card represents the star sign Taurus, where Crowley instilled the bull to also represent the Elephant (seen on the card either side of The Hierophant figure), drawing from Hindu mysticism, hence the two Elephants on each side of the card. The Four Kerubs which comes from Christian mythology, as the protectors of God. The pentagram with the dancing male child, visible on The Hierophant's chest. Where Crowley, influenced by pre New Age philosophy, which was mostly derived from Helena Blavatsky's 1874 Theosophical society, had combined their "Age of Aeons", in which Crowley equates as the next chosen one, from his own religion Thelema, that there will be a new era under the Child Horus, replacing the "Dying God". Combining, once again, Hindu and Egyptian beliefs to this card. The Scarlet Woman, sits below The Hierophant, which came exclusively from Crowley's Thelema, in which Crowley envisaged that a mystical woman would appear to set some kind of disorder onto the world. Sexist to say the least, probably borrowing from theocratic beliefs that the woman is a temptress and chaotic in nature. However, as you would expect contradiction and confusion is abound, where Crowley uses the word "love" in his description of the card, he also states, that the Scarlet Woman, "no longer the mere vehicle of her male counterpart, but armed and militant." Is the next Age of Aeon (?).
And finally, the Phallic Headdress and Rose. Hebrew letter Vav, meaning "tent peg" or "nail", and the astrological symbol for Venus. In conclusion, a messy card. But, there is one redeeming feature, The Hierophant with his left hand pointing down towards the Earth, which Crowley, thankfully has missed in his own muddled interpretation. Therefore, I will read the card as follows:
Reading:
All is noise, as are all symbolism. We do not lack meaning, we are dying from meaning. I stand before you in confusion, yet it is very simple. Close your eyes, shut out all sounds. Then open your eyes and redefine anew. Do you see what was there before? Am I not standing alone? Naked to this world. I hold no key, no vision, nothing. I am neither child or an adult. I am devoid. Yet, I point with my left hand towards the Earth. Balanced, in that integration. Become one with the Earthly realm, and then be dissolved by it.
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"Princess of Cups"
Princess of Cups Thoth tarot shows Aleister Crowley's fondness for Hindu and Buddhist esoteric, with a dancing woman surrounded by a Lotus flower, representing purity and rebirth, upper right side of the card, the Swan above the Princess's head, which in Hindu and Buddhist mythology, particularly Tibetan, represents wisdom and enlightenment. The river Dolphin, creation and life. Finally she is holding, in her right hand, an ornamented bowel with a tortoise inside, which is another powerful symbolism of the esoteric, as the tortoise, once again, showing Crowley's affection for Hindu mythology, is seen as the supreme feminine deity that holds the world above its shell. Yet, it is the Princess who holds the tortoise, announcing how powerful feminine wisdom and intuition can be, as a guide through the waves of life.
What I like about the Princess of Cups, which comes under the "Princess" set of four cards in the Thoth deck, it is one of the more prominent cards that represent positivity, as opposed to the darker meanings behind the majority of the Thoth cards, although Crowley's dichotomy of light and dark are usually intermixed within its meanings. The Princess of Cups is more blatantly light, I would read this card as supreme power of the feminine, with its nonchalant care, more so, its care for the self. The feminine undoubtedly has an intrinsic ability to cater and be self sufficient to its own entity. Through the great upheaval and turmoil of life, like the waves depicted in the card, she can dance, even if she is carrying the world. It is carried effortlessly. To reward the self with the power beyond the material world, can be at times be a material reward. Such are the diamonds portrayed on the hem of her gown. You are that diamond within the chaos.
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