The Book of Thoth (Crowley)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Book of Thoth : A Short Essay on the Tarot of the Egyptians is the title of The Equinox, volume III, number 5, by Aleister Crowley. The book is recorded in the vernal equinox of 1944, An Ixviii Sol in 0° 0' 0" Aries, March 21, 1944 e. v. 5:29 p. m. The book was originally published in an edition limited to 200 numbered and signed copies.

This book describes the philosophy and the use of Aleister Crowley's Thoth Tarot, a deck of Tarot cards designed by Crowley and painted by Lady Frieda Harris. The Thoth Tarot has become one of the best-selling and most popular Tarot Decks in the world.

Contents

[edit] Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn

Both Aleister Crowley and scholastic mystic occultist Arthur Edward Waite were members of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn. Already by 1909, Waite influenced by the work of Eliphas Levi, had already published the Rider-Waite tarot deck drawn by artist Pamela Colman Smith and in 1910 his Pictorial Key to the Tarot was published with 78 black and white plates of each card in the deck which included the appropriate explanation.[1]

By 1944, Crowley would match the pace in scholarship set by Waite in 1909 and at the same time, he would expand upon it by extending the field into Oriental philosophy, Middle Eastern practices and Western science including Relativity.[citations needed]

[edit] Contents

The book is divided into four major parts:

  • Part One: The Theory Of The Tarot.
  • Part Two: The Atu (Keys or Trumps).
  • Part Three: The Ccurt Cards.
  • Part Four: The Small Cards.

Part One is divided into three chapters; Part Twp into two chapters and an appendix; Part Three into one chapter; and Part Four into one chapter. The book includes a list of plates depicting the Tarot cards as seen by Crowley and Harris.

There is an Appendix A: the use of the Tarot in the Art of Divination; and an Appendix B which includes the obiter dictum: "the 'correspondences' are not arbitrary" plus the Key Scale of the Tree of Life with the conic sections of mathematics and a diagram attributing the trigrams of the I Ching to the ten Sephirot.

[edit] Editions

[edit] See also

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Waite, Arthur Edward The Pictorial Key to the Tarot, Rudolf Steiner Publications, 1971

[edit] Further reading