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Tarot: Understanding the meaning of the Three of Cups

by Morgan Drake Eckstein

Created on: April 01, 2009   Last Updated: April 13, 2010

A.E. Waite described the Three of Cups in his book, Pictorial Key to the Tarot, as "[Three] maidens in a garden-ground with cups uplifted, as if pledging one another". Waite's description omits the richness of the garden, the fine robes of the ladies, and the hints of crowns made of ribbons in the ladies' hair.

Of particular interest to the member of Golden Dawn is the hint of the cornucopia in the garden, for the esoteric title for this card used by the Order is "The Lord of Abundance". When positive in a reading, that is exactly what it means: fulfillment and a productive outcome of a matter; when negatively aspected, the card also signals the excesses that comes with abundance. Beyond this esoteric meaning, which is the blended result of the seven layers of Golden Dawn Tarot study, there are whole other worlds of possible meaning and symbolism.

The overriding layer to consider when studying any Tarot deck is the image that depicts the forces (energies) that the card represents. Without this layer, as Pat Zalewski points out, there is no unification of the other symbols (again energies) that go into a card; there is a reason that we don't simply have the sigils of the planets and zodiac signs on the cards; the picture makes the card more than the sum of its parts.

In the case of the deck devised by A.E. Waite, and created by the artist Pamela "Pixie" Colman Smith, the picture is that of three women holding up chalices, dancing around a common center. The three ladies will speak differently to each reader, but we can state some of the deeper symbolism that others may glimpse in the Three of Cups.

For the Wiccan, the three ladies can represent the mysteries of the three goddess figures of Wicca. While Smith depicted them all the same age, the modern-day student of witchcraft, the wiccan, knows that people of the same age can represent, and even embody, different aspects of the Triple Goddess. The Maiden (Lover), the Mother, and the Crone are the cycles that the universe, nature, and human beings all go though.

In another artist's version of the Three of Cups, the Secret Tarot (I Tarocchi Dei Segreti) drawn by Marco Nizzoli, the three women are replaced by three men sitting in a wood framed building while drinking from tankards. To many students of the esoteric Orders, these three men could be Freemasons, an Order that in an earlier time period met in taverns and pubs. While they no longer are considered a drinking Order (alcohol has been banned from its meetings),

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