Arthurian Hallowquest
48 topics in this forum
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Welcome to all! A quick word of explanation - this is not just a deck study, it is a place for discussion and sharing the lessons from the course book “The Arthurian Tarot Course - a Quest for All Seasons by Caitlin Matthews using the Arthurian Tarot. There are 60 lessons in all, and the course could be completed in the space of about a year, although it can take as long as you wish. I’ve been working on it, on and off, for a long time. Discussion began on this course on the now closed Aeclectic Tarot forum more than a decade ago, and I thank the owners and moderators of this forum for the chance to continue the conversations here. The deck an…
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Here the threads directly relating to the lessons of the study are indexed to make it easier (I hope) to follow along. Depending on which version of the study book you are using the lesson numbers might be slightly different, but you should be able to figure out where you are as I will use the card names as well as the lesson numbers to help you find your way around in each section. Preparing for the Quest - lessons 1 - 5 https://www.thetarotforum.com/forums/topic/268-hallowquest-lesson-1-meditation-and-diary-keeping/ https://www.thetarotforum.com/forums/topic/432-hallowquest-lesson-2-the-seeker-in-the-wasteland/ https://www.thetarotforum.com/fo…
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The figure who represents the place of the magician in the pack. Quite a long introduction to him, and then a meditation. Also a large (13 cards) reading, entitled Merlin's Mirror Reading
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So let's suppose you've worked your way through the whole of the HallowQuest, and now aren't sure what to do next. Or you tried the book course, but didn't feel it worked for you, and stopped. How about jumping off and doing things a different way? Here is my version of a walk through the Stone suit for the winter, as my new journey through a previously traveled landscape. You can do anything you want - I just wanted to inspire folks to pick up their deck again and re-imagine. I took the whole suit, and laid them out randomly. Then I strove to forget what I knew, and simply put them as images in an order that made sense to me . . . Hallow…
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I thought I'd go back to the big blue book for this study "HallowQuest - The Arthurian Tarot Course - which is the largest and most comprehensive I think, and take a look at the spreads listed during the course material. I wondered how they were placed across the calendar year. There are 12 multi-card readings linked with the year-long study of the cards, but not evenly spaced. Still, this might prove a useful reference to them all, if anyone wants to seek them out in the book pages for a specific inquiry. In the Winter/Stone section: January 5th - Pursuit of the Soul reading February 9th - Gift of the Totems reading February 23rd - Merlin…
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These ceremonies - the investitures - are the culmination of the traveling with the suit sign. They are a celebration, a commitment, and a formal rite. The instructions for them is quite long, but is well laid out in the book, and is very similar for each sign. May the journey through the seasons bless you PathWalker )0(
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At last, in the deep underground, we meet the Stone Hallow card. No questions or tasks. There's a meditation. A reading, entitled The Augury of the Stone of Wisdom (five cards)
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An introduction to the deeper meaning of the card, and then: Questions 1. What new cycle do you foresee coming into operation in the next ten years? 2. When all is dark, what are your personal strategies for stimulating hope? Meditation.
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We meet the King, and then travel through all three of these cards. Tasks and Questions: 1. What is your definition of 'tradition'? Now look up the derivation of the word 'tradition' in an etymological dictionary. In what way does it's original meaning accord or differ from your current understanding of the word? 2. Looking over your recent life, trace your apprenticeship on the spiritual path. What are it's major signposts, achievements and practical applications in your life? 3. In an ideal world, how would you most like to spend your time? What qualities do you derive from practicing this/these pursuits? Me…
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Card XIII - Death is depicted as the Washer at the Ford - a wild female figure washing bloodied cloths that will never come clean. Questions: 1. What do you fear most about death? 2. If you had one day of life left to you, what situations, relationships, ambitions would be left unresolved? 3. What are you clinging onto that needs to fly free in your life? Task: This week, attempt to face up to or bring towards a better resolution, one factor which your death would leave unresolved. A meditation
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We meet the next three cards here. The wonderful Stone Queen, she is one of my favourites, watching the outside world with her hand mirror and she sits by the window - such symbolism there. Along with Stone Six and Seven, interesting cards, day and night, heat and cold, the circle and the lie. Lots of comparisons to draw from the pair. There are questions:- 1. What is your relationship to the land in which you live/ 2. How do you share your gifts and resources with others? 3. What are your present strategies for keeping things in proportion? And a meditation in which we travel from the glade of the Hermit to the Queen's c…
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"I am the voice in the stillness and I am the listening. . ." Today we meet the Grail Hermit - the Arthurian tales are full of helpful hermits in the woods who serve to explain the happenings to those who are questing and have missed the point! So a paragraph about this major arcana figure, and then questions, a task and a meditation. Questions. 1. Looking over your work so far, what is the clearest theme or message which runs through your diary? 2. Bring to mind the times you trusted or distrusted your inner voice. What led you to trust or distrust yourself at those times? what do you learn from this that you can draw upon in th…
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As usual the cards introduce themselves to us. Then some questions: 1. What are the best spurs for you to continue a course of action when the way ahead seems impossibly hard? 2. In what ways are you rich and achieved? 3. In what ways are you impoverished or insecure? "In questions 2 and 3, concentrate upon your inner qualities as much as your material possessions." Then we are set a task, which I really like the look of - for it's practicality I guess Task: Spend one morning/afternoon/evening this week sorting out one intractable part of your lie, e.g. a messy cupboard, an unruly schedule or plan, an unresolved i…
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A week now to study the card Taliesin - ". . . the great poet and preserver of the ancient memories of the roots of time." After a short reading of text there's a meditation for us to do, and then a tarot reading, using a 9 card spread called "The Pursuit of the Soul reading". This is the first specific reading we are doing for ourselves in this section of the Quest, and is interesting in that it divides the "greater powers" (major arcana) from the "lesser powers" (minor arcana) and 8 of the cards are laid from the minors, and the last card from the majors. I can add details of the card positions and so forth if folks would like. P…
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Here we meet the Stone Maiden - with a head in a dish (!) - and walk through the landscape cards of Stone Two and Three. We are asked questions: 1. What is the best, most practical reason for your quest? 2. Which different spiritual directions or esoteric methods jockey for your attention? Which do you intend to pursue right now? 3. What are the pre-eminent qualities of your spiritual craft? How do you reflect these? We are given a task - planting each night a 'seed of intention' into the squares of the chessboard, for fruition in the months ahead. There's also a meditation where we move through the cards, with the…
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The lessons have different numbers depending on which version of the HallowQuest book you are using! Don't worry, just find the Stone Realm and begin This is the first lesson of the Stone Realm, in which we visit the Stone Castle in meditation, do some considering of our own selves, and - if we wish - conduct a ceremony to welcome in the Stone Hallow . I had begun working with stone suit years ago and then left it. Here is a link to the original entry on the Aeclectic Tarot forum. I don't think anyone else was joining in at this point! http://www.tarotforum.net/showthread.php?p=2983841
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In the book of the HallowQuest, the suits are aligned to the seasons, and the seasons are given dates. Sounds good so far huh? Each season is the same length of time (and so the lessons and meditations fir neatly in each section) and each season is said to begin at the Solstice and Equinox like so: Winter 21 December Spring 23 March Summer 21 June Autumn 21 September. I have realised, after years of trying to work through these "at the right time" that I disagree with Caitlin Matthews' dates! (Oh my, I feel so naughty at this point LOL) For me the Solstices and Equinoxes are the crescendo of each season perhaps, but …
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The illustration show a small bridge over a deep chasm crumbling away. The sword falls down over the edge too. The LWB talks about the card as it relates to the Arthurian tales, but after a long time of using the deck, here's one interpretation that has come to me recently. I know it's personal and quite specific, but I think it can be useful to see what others ways we can 'read' a card. Other interpretations are very welcome. SWORD THREE The broken bridge. The unbridgeable gap. They can't come back! It's not about me exactly, except that I am on one side and some things I've been caught up on are on the other. And it's no good waiting (here) because t…
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Let’s start a discussion about this major card
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Let’s start a discussion about this major card? Here's my take on the Green Knight . . . Welcome the arrival of the Green Knight - his teaching method may seem extreme but he cares for you, and aims to empower you to make beneficial changes. How have you experienced this card? PathWalker )0(