Last but not least, by any means – Pisces in the court
cards. Different traditions have
different astrological correspondences when it comes to the Court Cards. Generally (but not always!) these
correspondences depend on how cardinality, fixity and mutability have been assigned. As Pisces is the mutable Water sign, I’m
looking for the Cups court card that’s associated with fluctuating emotions and
changes within relationships of all kinds – romantic, platonic, familial.
Prince of Cups (trimmed):
© Druid Craft Tarot
|
So what court card does this represent? If you work with a system that assigns
mutability to the Knights, as do most of the Rider-Waite-Smith-based decks,
you’re looking at the Knight of Cups. This
Knight will react through his feelings – his heart will rule his head! He’s
kind and sympathetic, with an affinity for the underdog. Not one of the speedy Knights, the image
usually depicts the Knight on horseback walking slowly, often beside water –
letting things happen in their own time, not pushing or rushing. In some
images, he wears a winged helmet, representing the wings of spirit – the realm
that Pisces is most interested in. The
Piscean Knight is a dreamer, one who longs for an all-encompassing, ideal love.
Son of Cups (trimmed):
© Haindl Tarot
|
Knights are often associated with quests – this one will be
in search of love, in pursuit of dreams and ideals, and will be willing to make
sacrifices. The Son of Cups in
the Haindl deck is represented by Parsifal, one of the Knights who searched for
the Holy Grail – an ideal if ever there was one. Inspired, too – another Piscean Knightly
quality. Emotional integrity is a good phrase for a Piscean court card; could
this be the object of the quest?
The shadow side of this Knight could be a tendency to be
moody, or to becoming lost in a dream world – possibly to the point of becoming
addicted to something in the quest to lose oneself, to escape the reality of
daily life.
Druid Craft Tarot created by Philip
Carr-Gomm and Stephanie Carr-Gomm, illustrated by Will Worthington, published
by Connections
Haindl Tarot, created
by Hermann Haindl, published by U.S. Games Systems, Inc.
If
you’ve enjoyed this post, you might be interested in my e-book, Astrology in Tarot
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