We were discussing the Ten of Swords on AeclecticTarot’s forum so I thought I’d summarize my thoughts here. A person lies on land by a body of water with hills blue in the distance. I usually think of the water as a lake because there’s no movement indicated—the water looks placid or even lifeless. The sky is black overhead but, above the mountains, the darkness breaks to reveal a slit of yellow sky.
Contrary to their attributed qualities of Air and Mind, Swords both depict and evoke in the viewer very strong, mostly disturbing, emotions. I once did a Tarot and Emotions Research Project in response to this fact.
Here are the emotion words for the Ten of Swords (times the number of respondents who picked the word):
hopeless (x15)
overwhelmed (x12)
despair (x11)
exhausted (x5)
hatred (x5)
pity (x3)
Waite says very little about this card in his Pictorial Key to the Tarot (PKT):
“A prostrate figure, pierced by all the swords belonging to the card. Divinatory Meanings: Whatsoever is intimated by the design; also pain, affliction, tears, sadness, desolation. It is not especially a card of violent death.”
His additional meanings include imprisonment and treason on the part of friends—which I interpret as ‘stabbed in the back.’
Waite was always very precise with his vocabulary. The key word in his description above is “prostrate,” which means “to cast (oneself) face down on the ground in humility, submission, or adoration; to overthrow, overcome, or reduce to helplessness.” For me, it emphasizes submission to something overwhelming either by choice (humility) or by being overcome. Victimization is a possibility.
He also uses “pierce,” meaning to penetrate or cut through, “by all the swords,” which correspond with mind and intellect. This suggests a kind of ultimate penetration, reaching the end of thought or an idea. This can also indicate pinning ideas down.
Waite’s main emotions are sadness and desolation. Of the latter, the Random House Dictionary says: “The desolate person is deprived of human consolation, relationships, or presence.” Is that why three people gave pity as their emotion in my research project? Has hatred of him by others rendered him desolate?
I have a copy of PKT that once belonged to a priest, whose notes are often enlightening. He points to Rev. 19:15: “And out of his mouth goeth a sharp sword, that with it he should smite the nations: and he shall rule them with a rod of iron: and he treadeth the winepress of the fierceness and wrath of Almighty God.” The poor guy looks like he could be both the grapes that were pressed and the nation that was smited.
This priest also refers to Waite’s book The Holy Kabbalah, where we find: “The Flaming Sword which turned every way signifies angels set over the chastisement of man in this world.” This is in a section on the Fall of Man and the Legend of the Deluge [Flood] in which Waite talks about both Eve and Noah having pressed grapes into wine. “The fact that Noah pressed the grapes—as Eve is said also to have done—partook of the juice and so became drunken, is affirmed to contain a mystery of wisdom. . . . [Noah], having set himself to fathom that sin which had caused the fall of the first man, . . . raised a corner of the veil concerning that breach of the world which ought always to remain secret.” Waite then refers to the dangers of some kinds of knowledge. Could this be chastisement for knowing too much? To “chastise” comes from roots meaning “to make pure.” Are limiting thoughts being pressed from him so that what’s left are pure “spirits”?
In the Grail and Masonic Mysteries that Waite used when devising the Minor Arcana (see my article in Llewellyn’s Tarot Reader 2006), this card refers specifically to the death of the Masonic ‘Master Builder’ (murdered treasonously by his brethern), as well as the death of the many knights who perished on the Grail Quest. In the Welsh Perceval, it is the “Sword which broke and was rejoined, [and] in the stress of the last trial, was shattered beyond recovery.”
Waite specifically tells us in PKT that the Knight of Swords is Galahad (who was girded with the Sword of David). He explains how the Quest of Galahad tells how “the Warden of the Mysteries together with the Holy Things [the four suits/Grail Hallows], was removed once and for all . . . [because] the world was not worthy.” And, “The death pictured in the Mysteries is therefore in no sense physical, but is mystical, like the resurrection which follows it” (Waite, The Hidden Church of the Holy Grail). Remember that in PKT, he said: “It is not especially a card of violent death.”
This is the suit of Swords taken to an extreme—”to the nth degree.” Yet in reaching its ultimate conclusion, nothing further can be done in that direction through either thought or aspiration. Now there’s room for a new possibility to emerge [the rising of the black clouds revealing yellow light]—though it has to come from a new and different place. It is an ending that clears the way for new opportunity, but it is only when the ending is fully accepted that the opportunity can emerge. This card is about being pinned down and stuck and finding the blessing in that (note that his hand makes the Hierophant’s sign of benediction). Otherwise the new potential, the Ace (which is the sum of 1+0) cannot be perceived, much less appreciated.
Nevertheless, each of the cards is so rich that a single meaning can’t be the sum total of any card, including this one. I always go with how the querent sees the card at the moment of the reading. Some never see the hand of benediction, while others focus on it right away. Some are very frightened by the card. They think it means the absolute end of something they don’t want to let go of. Or they think it will hurt. Or that they’ll be stuck here forever. Alternatively, they ignore everything except the yellow light.
If I ask a querent to lay down on the floor in the exact position of the figure on the RWS card, something else always happens. Often there’s a feeling of relief and surrender. Some people find it’s like the “deadman’s pose” at the end of a strenuous yoga session, a position from which few want to move because it feels so-o-o good. It’s nice not to have to fight things any more. Others find that the sensation is like acupuncture that awakens the meridians or like the paralysis of spinal injury that numbs.
Essentially, I believe in understanding as deeply as possible the state and sensations depicted on the card as it is, before one rushes on to the yellow light that breaks through the dark clouds. As hard as it is, it is only by knowing the true state and feelings of the person on this card that we having any chance of knowing its blessings.
10 comments
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March 3, 2008 at 12:15 pm
Eva Yaa Asantewaa
I also like to keep in mind that 10 is a number beyond basic numerology’s initial 1-9 range. The Ten of Swords’s image suggests that something has been kept around (or kept in its current state) too long. Its freshness date is long past, and rather than gracefully letting go, it has hung on or been hung on to beyond any positive usefulness. So, this is the “For God’s sake, get out!” card. It shows up when a querent is being forced to push off. The positivity in that 10 is that there is a new beginning inherent in it (1+0=1), if only we will bow to the natural progression of things. That’s the benediction.
I so appreciate your use of imitation of body posture/language. As a dance critic, I can see how that technique could cause many breakthroughs in understanding of Tarot’s imagery.
March 3, 2008 at 7:23 pm
marygreer
Eva,
Thank you for your additions. I love the phrase “its freshness date is long past,” and that the benediction lies in bowing to the natural progression of things. Great insights, succinctly said, that I’ll try to keep in mind when reading the card.
Mary
March 6, 2008 at 10:07 am
Le Mare
Good day!
First of all I’d like to thank you for this blog. These materials really five much insight to Tarot cards for me personally.
I just wanted also to say, that I’m a Russian – English translator, so I make translations of your artcles and post them in Russian web, giving all credits to you anf links to your blog. I really hope that you don’t mind that!!
So, if you ever need some translation into Russian – feel free to contact me, since I really enjoy these translations and do it just for myself and other interested Russian-speakers.
March 6, 2008 at 5:07 pm
marygreer
Thank you for your translations. I appreciate being asked. As long as everything is clearly credited to me and there’s a link back to my blog, then I don’t have objections. Thank you for telling me.
Mary
March 16, 2008 at 6:57 am
Suzanne Langley
I have visited this site on many an occasion now but this post is the 1st one that I have ever commented on.
Congratulations on such a fine article and site I have found it very helpful and informative – I only wish that there were more out there like this one.
I never leave empty handed, sometimes I may even be a little disappointed that I may not agree with a post or reply that has been made. But hey! that is life and if every one agreed on the same thing what a boring old world we would live in.
Keep up the good work and cheers.
March 16, 2008 at 4:53 pm
marygreer
Suzanne – you are welcome to comment on anything with which you don’t agree. I don’t claim to always be right, and the real point of these studies is to learn as much as we can. Thank you for speaking up.
Mary
April 9, 2008 at 11:44 pm
Betty
Dear Mary:
They say there are no coincidences. Well! I’ve been playing with Tarot cards for a while now, trying to learn how to read them. Last night I did a Celtic Spread and while I was shuffling, the Ten of Swords just turned over in the deck – jumped out at me. I’m not real skilled at this, but I knew that was significant. So, I wrote down the name and position of each card in the spread and thought, “I really should get someone to ‘read’ these for me.”
Then I opened my email a little while ago and there was a recommendation from Amazon for the book, Seventy-Eight Degrees of Wisdom. I thought that rather strange, since I bought that book a couple of months ago from Amazon. They don’t recommend books I’ve already bought. So I went to Amazon to check it out.
When I looked that book up, it led me to your book, 21 Ways to Read a Tarot Card. And that led me to the notes from your blog, which happened to mention “…the dreaded Ten of Swords,” which of course caught my attention and prompted me to check out your blog.
Which leads me to believe that I should ask you: Can you interpret these cards for me? Or rather, WOULD you interpret them for me? Please? Here’s the spread:
10 of Swords: turned over face up while shuffling
1. This covers you: Wheel of Fortune
2. This crosses you: Hermit
3. This is beneath you: High Priestess
4. This is behind you: 10 of Wands
5. This crowns you: Queen of Wands
6. This is before you: 7 of Cups
7. This is your self: Death
8. Your environment: Star
9. Hope/Fears: Chariot
10. Outcome: Empress
I pulled a clarification card on the ‘Before’ position (card 6): 8 of Wands
All cards were in the upright position.
I’d appreciate any insight you can offer. I’d be glad to pay you for your services.
April 10, 2008 at 12:47 am
marygreer
I’m glad the Ten of Swords post was there for you. I plan on doing more cards.
I don’t comment on personal spreads on my blog. I do offer a limited number of hour-long telephone consultations by appointment. If you are interested, send me a private email (see Email on the header).
Thanks for asking,
Mary
November 11, 2010 at 10:01 am
Zoulaikha
I had a reading with 5 cards. First card was me = 10 of coins, second what I expect = prince of wands, what I do not expect= hermit is the central card, my short future = temperance, and long term future= ten of swords.
The reader said 10 of swords is to let go of what I am holding on to, accept the pain and move away. But When I kept looking at the cards, I thought maybe, 10 0f coins meant for me that I am happy to live with my sister and have hard time to leave her. Maybe 10 of swords is telling me to end this situation and walk to the sun. What do you think? I will appreciate if could answer me.
November 11, 2010 at 7:12 pm
mkg
Zoulaikha –
I am a professional reader and so I can’t do a reading for you for free. Also, I think that the cards respond to the reader – there’s not one fixed set of meanings and different decks may also have very different meanings.
However, it doesn’t sound as if the 10 of Swords position is an advice position. The card usually speaks of the end of a cycle that may occur naturally on its own. Temperance suggests letting things take their natural course over time. However, I am not the reader and don’t know enough about the situation to advise you on this.
Mary
__________ Mary K. Greer https://marygreer.wordpress.com/