The Tarot of Eli 2, LLC: Rider-Waite-Smith Tarot- Key 13-Death & The Triple Goddess Tarot - Key 13-Death

Western Hermetic Qabalah: Rider-Waite-Tarot-Transformation and rebirth.

· Triple Goddess and RWS Tarot

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Above all things, know thyself!

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The Triple Goddess Tarot-Key13-Death

Death-Rider-waite-smith tarot: Transformation and rebirth.

Radiant Edition: Rider-Waite-Smith-Key 13-Death

Key 13 – Death: The Warrior of Transformation and the End of the Piscean Spell

The Rider–Waite–Smith presentation of Key 13 – Death marks a clear departure from both the Golden Dawn tradition and the Marseilles lineages. Where the older decks emphasized Death as an impersonal reaper or skeletal force moving through the cycles of nature, Waite reveals something far more autobiographical—his own mystical confrontation with the formula of Death and Resurrection.

This is not the passive harvester of souls.
This is a Knight of the Great Work, armed and riding with sovereign purpose.

The Black Knight of RWS tarot symbolic invulnerability and inevitability

The Black Knight and the Fall of the King of Matter

In the RWS card, Death appears as a skeletal knight in black armor—a martial, unstoppable figure whose armor is not a symbol of violence but of invulnerability and inevitability. As he passes, the crowned King lies fallen at his feet.

This moment represents:

  • the death of the old ruling paradigm of matter,

  • the collapse of the ego’s false sovereignty, and

  • the inability of physical power or temporal authority to resist the evolutionary tide of Spirit.

This scene is deeply Hermetic: the “King of Matter” corresponds to the old Sun of the personality, the solar mask worn by the unawakened ego. Before the march of the Soul’s transformation, that false monarch must relinquish its throne.

RWS-Bishop the passing of the Piscean Age

The Bishop and the Passing of the Piscean Age

Before the Black Knight stands a bishop, his fish-shaped miter unmistakably tied to the sign of Pisces.

Waite is encoding a personal and esoteric truth:

The Death card is not merely the ending of life—
it is the end of an Age, a shift in the Aeonic current.

The bishop’s presence implies:

  • the dissolution of Piscean hierarchy,

  • the decline of inherited spiritual authority, and

  • the transition from blind faith to direct inner gnosis.

In Hermetic terms, this is the shift from the Age of the Dying God to the age of awakened Selfhood—where each aspirant encounters their own Higher Genius rather than relying on priestly intermediaries.

Rising sun between two towers-Death RWS Tarot

The Rising Sun Between the Two Towers

Behind the Death Knight rises the Sun—its path framed by the two towers first seen on the Moon card.

This continuity is deliberate:

  • The Moon card is the path through illusion, fear, and the instinctual mind.

  • The Death card is the moment of passing beyond that threshold.

The Sun’s ascent symbolizes:

  • the resurrection formula,

  • the victory of consciousness over unconsciousness, and

  • the emergence of the True Self from the grave of the old personality.

This is the Hermetic formula of Solve et Coagula:
first dissolution, then the new incarnation of the Solar Soul.

The White Rose of Kether -Five petals of Geburah and 10 of the Tree of Life RWS Tarot

The White Rose of Geburah and Kether

The flying banner carried by Death’s knight shows a white rose with ten petals—five inner, five outer. This emblem is one of the most sophisticated symbols in the entire deck.

Five petals → Geburah (5th Sephirah)
The rose expresses:

  • the purifying fire of Mars,

  • the discipline of severity,

  • the cutting away of the false, and

  • the sacred violence that liberates the Soul from its bondage.

Death does not destroy.
Death refines.

Yet the rose has ten petals, placing the image within the entire structure of the Tree of Life. Ten is Malkuth, but ten is also the totality—all Sephiroth under the Crown.

The rose is white for a reason:

  • White is the color of Kether, the source of all emanations.

  • It is the perfect balance of all colors.

  • It is the zero-state of the Unmanifest.

  • It is directly linked to 0–The Fool and Uranus, the cosmic impulse of unexpected breakthrough.

Thus, the banner proclaims:

Transformation is always rooted in Kether.

Every ending is the return to Source.

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The Hermetic Essence of the RWS Death Card

In this more mature, visionary version of Key 13, Waite restores the card to its true Western Hermetic meaning:

  • Death is the warrior of Geburah,

  • sent by the Crown of Kether,

  • cutting through the illusions of the personality,

  • ushering the consciousness beyond the Moon’s labyrinth,

  • and awakening the Solar Self whose resurrection is inevitable.

Key 13 is not the end—
it is the crossing of a threshold.

It is the path from the trapped self to the liberated Soul.

Triple Goddess Tarot- Key 13 Death symbology.

The Triple Goddess Tarot-Death- Key 13

To the well-organized mind, death is but the next great adventure.

-J.K. Rowling

Triple Goddess Tarot – Key 13: Death

The Feminine Reaper and the Subconscious Threshold

In the Triple Goddess Tarot, Key 13 – Death returns to a more classical European portrayal of the Reaper, but with a distinctly feminine presence. Instead of the armored knight of the Rider–Waite–Smith or the ecstatic dissolution of the Thoth Death card, we find a mysterious death-masked woman standing in a moonlit graveyard. The setting is drenched in haze, where the night sky clouds over shifting gravestones—an environment that mirrors the nephesh, the animal soul/subconscious, and its instinctive fear of the unknown.

This imagery does not rely on kings, bishops, or attendants.
Here, Death is intimate, personal, and unaccompanied.
She stands before the querent as the veil itself.

Dancing with death
Flowers of passing-Triple goddess tarot

The Feminine Reaper and the Flowers of Passing

Clutched in her hand is a bouquet of freshly-plucked flowers—purple, red, and orange. Their vibrancy is intentional:

  • Purple for spiritual sovereignty and the higher self awaiting rebirth.

  • Red for the Martian fire of Geburah, where the old form is cut away.

  • Orange for Hod’s mercurial intellect, now ready to reinterpret a completed cycle.

In her other hand she holds an oversized scythe, the universal emblem of Time’s harvest. Traditionally, the scythe is the instrument that separates spirit from form, idea from completed manifestation. In European lore, the feminine figure of Samethea—the Goddess of Autumnal Death—was honored as the one who reaps the old so that the new may grow. The Triple Goddess deck preserves this ancestral memory of the Lady of Endings, the one who guides souls across thresholds.

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The Graveyard: A Map of the Subconscious

The hazy cemetery is not merely a physical setting; it is a psychic landscape:

  • Gravestones represent completed identities, versions of yourself that once served you but can no longer contain your expanding consciousness.

  • The haze mirrors the fog of the subconscious, which reacts to change with fear because it perceives change as a threat to survival.

  • The night sky represents the Unknown, which the uninitiated mind interprets as danger—but which the Hermetic aspirant recognizes as potential.

In Western Qabalah, this moment corresponds to crossing from Nephesh (animal soul) into Ruach (reason, identity, and mental order) after the necessary dissolution of an outdated pattern.

The Five aspects of the Soul /Psyche

The Practical Message: Letting the Cycle Complete

When Key 13 appears in a reading—whether in the Triple Goddess deck or any Hermetic system—it carries the same essential doctrine:

Something has reached its full measure.
It can no longer grow.
It must be transformed.

The card signals:

  • release of old habits,

  • letting go of possessions or attachments,

  • the end of a stagnant relationship or identity,

  • the dissolution of a pattern that has caused harm,

  • a spiritual initiation that requires shedding the old shell.

Where the unawakened see loss, the adept sees motion—for Life itself is motion, and what moves must eventually complete its arc.

In Hermetic philosophy, every form carries a measurement. Once that measurement is fulfilled, the form must end so the force within it can evolve. This is the root of the Mars/Geburah current hidden in the Death archetype: the sacred severity that clears away what no longer supports the Soul’s journey.

Samethea-lady of Endings- Triple Goddess Tarot

Transformation as Liberation

Rather than doom or danger, this card signifies liberation:

  • The end of a sabotaging cycle.

  • The removal of psychological gravity.

  • The release of a burden you may not have realized you were carrying.

  • The rising of the True Self from an obsolete identity.

The Triple Goddess version embodies this liberation with a gentler, more intimate touch. The lady in the death mask is not here to conquer, but to escort—to lead you out of the shadowed garden and into a new dawn of being.

Just as the RWS card shows the sun rising between the twin towers,
and the Thoth card reveals Nun dancing through dissolution,
the Triple Goddess death-maiden quietly assures:

“This ending frees the Soul. Step forward.
The old chapter is complete.
Your renewal begins now.”

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The River, the Dark Waters, and the Alchemy of Transformation

In the Rider–Waite–Smith Key 13 – Death, the river winding through the scene is far more than a scenic detail—it is the very formula of transformation itself. Water is the element that continually dies and is reborn: rising from the Sea as vapor, condensing into cloud, descending again as rain, snow, or ice, and reshaping the landscape with every cycle. This constant dissolution and re-coagulation is the essence of the Death card.

Just as water abandons each form to assume the next, so too must bodies, identities, and Souls shed what has served its measure and move into a new configuration of Being. This is Geburah’s work—the sacred severity that frees the Life-Force from obsolete shells.

In Hermetic psychology, this river also represents the Dark Waters of the subconscious—the nephesh, the instinctual soul. The nephesh fears endings because it is bound to survival; everything unknown feels like annihilation. Hence the river in Death is the threshold between the known and what must be crossed. The aspirant who dares to pass over these waters enters a higher order of consciousness.

Even the vulture—a symbol with ancient Egyptian roots—reinforces this transformative principle. The vulture converts carrion back into living vitality, showing that nothing perishes; everything is repurposed into another mode of existence. It is the emblem of alchemical putrefaction, the necessary breakdown that precedes the birth of a more purified form.

The Sun, the West, and the Jupiterian Wheel of Endings

On the RWS card, the Sun appears to be setting in the West—the direction traditionally attributed to this Key. But simultaneously, in the same tableau, it also rises between the two towers, depicting the cycle of death-and-rebirth compressed into a single image.

This paradox is intentional:
the Sun sets on the old self and rises on the new.

The West is the quarter of water, twilight, and dissolution, where forms pass away. Yet the placement of the Sun rising shows the Jupiterian current hidden in this card—the expansive principle that governs cycles, rotations, and the turning of the Wheel. Jupiter’s influence here is not obvious, but essential: it governs the circularity of endings becoming beginnings, the eternal return of the Light through the transformations of form.

In this way, the Death card teaches an advanced Hermetic mystery:

All endings are rotational, not linear.
What appears as cessation is simply the arc of a greater cycle.
The Sun never truly sets; it transitions to another horizon.

The twin towers between which the Sun rises represent Life and Death as complementary gates, not oppositional forces. The Soul passes between them many times during its incarnational journey, each time shedding and assuming new modes of expression.

The Human Soul=five mental planes of the psyche

“Nephesh is the Magick Device itself—it must be honored, not exiled. It craves alignment, not suppression.”

-Eli Serabeth

Above all things, know thyself!

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The Zodiacal House of Scorpio and the Mystery of Key 13

The Death card is attributed to the Zodiacal House of Scorpio, a fixed water sign whose force is not passive or reflective like Cancer, nor dissolving like Pisces. Scorpio represents intensity, penetration, and irrevocable transformation. Its waters are deep, pressurized, alchemical—capable of both decay and resurrection. This is not the gentle tide, but the submerged crucible.

Scorpio’s traditional ruler is Mars, which immediately links Key 13 to the purifying severity of Geburah and, by extension, to Key 16 — The Tower, the eruption that breaks the shell of the old form. Modern astrology adds Pluto as co-ruler, reinforcing the theme of annihilation-and-rebirth, the underworld descent, and the secret fire that gestates beneath appearances.

Astrologers also speak of Scorpio as the exaltation of Uranus, and this detail is one of the most esoterically potent keys in the entire Western Mysteries. Uranus—corresponding to 0 – The Fool—is the shock of sudden illumination, the chaotic leap beyond form. When exalted in Scorpio, Uranus reveals that the deepest transformations of the Soul arise not from death as negation, but from death as liberation into a higher octave of being. Scorpio becomes the womb of the unexpected breakthrough—the “crack in the shell” through which the Fool’s pure light invades the world of form.

Mars in the house of Scorpio symbolism

Scorpio is the eighth astrological sign in the zodiac, and it is associated with the element Water and ruled by the planet Mars (traditional) and Pluto (modern). People born between October 23 and November 22 fall under the Scorpio sign. Here are some key characteristics often attributed to Scorpios:

  1. Passionate: Scorpios are known for their intense and passionate nature. They approach life with depth and emotion, whether it's in relationships, work, or personal interests.

  2. Determined: Once Scorpios set their sights on a goal, they are highly determined and focused. They don't easily give up and are willing to put in the effort needed to achieve their objectives.

  3. Mysterious: Scorpios tend to have a mysterious aura about them. They may keep aspects of their thoughts and emotions private, making it challenging for others to fully understand them.

  4. Resilient: Scorpios are often resilient and can bounce back from challenges. They possess a strong sense of inner strength that helps them endure difficulties and setbacks.

  5. Resourceful: Scorpios are resourceful problem-solvers. They have a knack for finding solutions, especially in challenging situations, and are not afraid to delve into the depths to uncover hidden truths.

  6. Loyal: Scorpios value loyalty in their relationships. They can be deeply devoted to their friends, family, and partners, and they expect the same level of loyalty in return.

  7. Independent: While Scorpios appreciate deep connections, they also value their independence. They may need personal space and time to recharge their emotional energy.

  8. Determined: Scorpios are known for their strong will and determination. When they set their sights on a goal, they pursue it with intensity and tenacity.

  9. Strategic: Scorpios often have a strategic mindset. They can analyze situations, plan ahead, and make calculated decisions, especially in areas of their life where they have a vested interest.

  10. Intuitive: Scorpios tend to have a strong intuition. They can sense and understand underlying emotions and motivations, which contributes to their depth of perception.

Keep in mind that while these characteristics are associated with Scorpios, individual personalities can vary based on various factors such as upbringing, experiences, and the influence of other astrological placements in an individual's birth chart.

DNA-the alchemy of reproduction

Scorpio, Sex, and the Alchemy of Reproduction

Scorpio rules the sex organs, and this anatomical correspondence is never trivial. Sex is simultaneously:

  • the force of death (the surrender of the ego and its boundaries),

  • the force of rebirth (creation through union),

  • and the force of identity dissolution (the merging of polarities).

This is why Scorpio is also linked to occult initiation. True transformation requires the death of a former version of the self, just as sexual union results in the creation of a new being. The Eighth House, which Scorpio governs, is named in astrology as the house of death—but also of inheritance, shared resources, and the mysteries of regeneration. What is inherited through death becomes the seed of another life.

Thus Key 13 stands at the crossroads where physical reproduction, psychic mutation, and spiritual rebirth converge.

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Color and Tone: Blue-Green and G-Natural

The color attributed to Scorpio on the Queen Scale is blue-green, the color of deep, living waters—neither stagnant nor placid, but vibrant with hidden energy and the motion of life below the surface. This shade hints at:

  • the subconscious currents,

  • the amniotic depths of transformation,

  • and the fertile darkness from which new forms arise.

The corresponding musical tone is G-natural, a note associated with transition, unlocking, and the movement from one harmonic state into another. In ritual or meditation work, using G-natural while invoking the Death key can help bridge the conscious mind with the deep Scorpionic field where change gestates.

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The Qabalistic Intelligence of Death: “The Ground of Similarity in the Likeness of All Beings”

Qabalistically, Key 13 – Death is far more than the termination of form. It is the power that links all forms together. In the Sepher Yetziratic correspondences, this Key is called:

“The Ground of Similarity in the Likeness of All Beings.”

This is one of the most overlooked—but most profound—attributions of the entire Tarot. It implies that Death is not destruction; it is the matrix of continuity, the field through which all living patterns resonate with one another. In this sense, Death governs the transmission of form, not its negation.

Dr. Paul Foster Case named this path the Imaginative Intelligence—the faculty through which archetypal ideas condense into biological and psychic structures. It is the intelligence that holds resemblance: mother to child, species to species, the whole chain of genetic inheritance stretching backward beyond human history.

Death, then, is the portal of similarity—the gate through which Life perpetuates its pattern even as individual forms pass away.

DNA as the Imaginative Intelligence in Matter

This Qabalistic insight leads directly into modern metaphysics:
DNA is the physical mechanism of the Imaginative Intelligence.

Through DNA:

  • resemblances are transmitted from one generation to the next,

  • archetypes incarnate into biological form,

  • memory is encoded into flesh,

  • and the very “likeness of beings” becomes a living continuum.

If “causation is mental,” as the Ageless Wisdom teaches, then DNA is the material precipitate of a mental archetype—a crystalline script shaped by the patterns of the Higher Mind long before it ever touched earth.

This explains why DNA behaves as if it possesses intention, adaptation, and memory far beyond mechanical probability. It is an intelligence that remembers itself.

 

DNA -Celestial Panspermia

Celestial DNA and the Panspermia Hypothesis

Modern research has proposed that DNA—or its primordial building blocks—may be older than the Earth itself, potentially tracing back trillions of years into cosmic history. If this is true, then human life is not merely terrestrial but interstellar in origin.

This harmonizes perfectly with the Hermetic doctrine:

“As above, so below—
the patterns of the heavens reproduce themselves in the dust of the Earth.”

Key 13 then becomes the Tarot’s symbolic confirmation of panspermia:
the idea that life’s template is celestial (a plasma intelligence) cast into the material matrix of Earth.

Our DNA is not a local phenomenon—it is a cosmic inheritance.

In this sense:

  • Death preserves the pattern,

  • the pattern migrates across space,

  • life awakens wherever the conditions allow,

  • and the archetypal resemblance persists across worlds.

The Death Key reveals that the continuity of life is a universal process—
a sacred chain stretching from the stars to the cells.

Death as the Cosmic Re-Threading of Form

Thus, Key 13 is not a symbol of finality but of the threading of the archetype into new vessels.

The form passes away.
The pattern persists.
The likeness re-emerges.
The intelligence behind the form continues its work.

Death is the intelligent continuity of the One Life, reweaving itself into ever-new forms.

The forces of transformation which result in physical death are inimical and feared only because the survival mind of the Subconscious misunderstands and fears them. These transformative forces are connected to reproduction, and by right use of Imagination (I-Magi-Nation) they can be tamed and transformed, so that they can be utilized for indefinite prolongation of physical existence. As many yogis prove. "There is only One Energy that cannot be created nor destroyed, only transformed (and Transmitted)." which is the 1st Law of Thermodynamics. This Tarot Card-Key 13-Death is but the image of this statement.

Ourboros-the serpent that eats its own tail symbology.

Organic matter

Death as the Law of Measurement and the Continuity of the Soul

Death—like every phenomenon in organic manifestation—is not a failure of life but an operation of Law. All forms arise by assumption of measurement; they are temporary configurations of consciousness shaped into limitation. What has been measured must eventually reach the boundary of its form and dissolve. This is not tragedy—it is the rhythm of manifestation, the pulse by which the Soul gains experience.

Once this law is understood, the personality does not “die.”
It simply moves forward into its next mode of Self-assumption and Self-awareness.

The form perishes;
the pattern persists;
the consciousness continues its journey.

subconscious fear of death symbolism

Fear of death is the root of all fears.

The Nephesh and the Illusion of Annihilation

Fear of death is not native to the Soul—it arises from the Nephesh, the animal soul, which is bound to the body and believes its extinction is the end of all identity. When the body ceases, the Nephesh enters a “darkness of sleep,” convinced that identity has collapsed with the brain. This creates the ancient terror embedded in the subconscious.

But this fear is founded on a misunderstanding.

When the aspirant conquers the fears of the subconscious, it becomes clear that:

  • consciousness is not the brain,

  • identity is not the personality,

  • and death is not annihilation but transition.

The Soul does not cease—it transforms.
It refines the persona, distills what is valuable, and carries it into its next manifestation on Malkuth or beyond.

To the Soul, death is simply movement.

Mind- the magnet of reality symbolism

“Being Only Your Imagination” — The Hermetic Truth of Self-Creation

Across lifetimes, many have rejected the continuity of consciousness, saying, “You are only your imagination.” Yet this statement—meant as dismissal—is actually an occult truth.

There is great wisdom in the Soul precisely because:

  • I AM is eternal,

  • while “me” is imagined,

  • and imagination (I-Magi-Nation) is the nation of the Magus,

  • the kingdom where consciousness shapes itself into form.

We are not our temporary assumptions.
We are the Assumer, the Magus behind the imagined persona.

Every lifetime is an act of Magick—
a self-imposed identity, crafted for the gathering of experience.

The dark night of fear

Fear as the Wall That Blocks Wisdom

This understanding is barred to those who fear.
As long as one fears death, the Gate of Knowledge remains closed, because all fear is ultimately fear of dissolution—fear that the “me” will cease.

But when the action of death is understood as:

  • inevitable,

  • lawful,

  • and necessary for the accumulation of Wisdom,

then the fear evaporates and the Soul awakens to its true nature.

Death reveals itself not as an ending, but as an alchemical operation.

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Coagulation → Solution → Renewal

Physical death mimics a deeper immortal truth:

What coagulates must dissolve.
What dissolves must return in a new configuration.
This is the recycling process that keeps Earth—and the universe—alive.

Death transforms one paradigm of organic being into another:

  • Coagulation—form taking on a specific measurement.

  • Solution—the dissolution of the form, freeing its essence.

  • Re-coagulation—rebirth into a new vessel of experience.

This cycle preserves Life, preserves wisdom, and preserves the evolutionary motion of consciousness.

Death, properly understood, is the engine of immortality.

Beyond the Piscean Dispensation: Death as a Universal Law, Not an Age-Bound Symbol

The Rider–Waite–Smith assigns Key 13 – Death to the closing of the Piscean Age and its dominant religious dispensation of Patriarchy. This is valid symbolically: the bishop’s fish-miter, the submissive kneeling before authority, and the receding structures of dogmatic order all point to the dissolution of Piscean hierarchies.

Yet it is crucial to remember:

Tarot was not created for the Piscean Age alone.

To limit the operation of Key 13 to a single historical period is to fundamentally misunderstand the nature of the Law it depicts. Death is not an age-bound event—it is the continuous, ever-present mechanism of transformation underwriting all organic manifestation.

Every age experiences Key 13.
Every culture experiences Key 13.
Every soul experiences Key 13.

The Piscean overlay is merely one expression of a law that is timeless.

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The Evolution of the Death Archetype in Tarot

Despite these shifting cultural overlays, the central symbolic language of Death has remained remarkably stable throughout Tarot history. While newer decks may refine or reinterpret the imagery, the underlying motifs persist because they express universal laws.

Modern, medieval, and early Renaissance decks alike show:

  • a walking or riding skeleton,

  • wielding a scythe,

  • accompanied by water and sunlight.

Some versions replace the banner with a scythe; others reintroduce both. But the Hermetic principle remains intact.

The evolving image is not contradiction—it is confirmation that Key 13 adapts to the consciousness of each age while maintaining its essential truth.

The RWS Death carries a black flag decorated with a white, five-petal rose, reflecting beauty, purification, and immortality and in numerology-the number five representing change. Together, these symbols reveal that death isn’t about life ending. Death is about endings and beginnings, birth, and rebirth, change and transformation.

skeleton dancing on all Hallows eve.

The Skeleton: The Foundation of All Movement

The skeleton is one of the most ancient metaphysical symbols. It is not a sign of morbidity but of structure, the essential frame that makes movement possible. Every gesture a human makes, every step taken, is supported by the skeleton.

Therefore:

The skeleton in Key 13 is the essence behind all change.
It is the underlying structure of transformation.

Just as the bones are the hidden framework behind physical mobility, Death is the hidden framework behind the motion of consciousness—the force that allows identity, form, and experience to transition from one state to another.

In Hermetic doctrine, the skeleton represents what remains after all illusions are stripped away. It is the foundation of Being in its bare truth.

the river-movement of the ages-RWS Tarot death

The River: The Movement of the Ages

Behind the skeletal figure lies a river that flows from northwest to southeast, paralleling the direction of the skeleton's movement. This directional flow is intentional:

  • Northwest corresponds to the old forms dissolving,

  • Southeast corresponds to manifestation and renewed life.

This is the alchemical transition from solution to coagulation, or in Qabalistic terms:

  • from the twilight of one assumption of Self

  • to the dawn of another.

The river symbolizes the Law of Flow, the perpetual motion of the Life-Force that moves through bodies, ages, civilizations, and even the Aeons themselves. It is the eternal current, unbroken across time.

RWS symbolism-The Sun as death and resurrection

The Sun: The Death–Resurrection Formula

The sun behind Death is both setting and rising—the paradoxical symbol of transition that unites ending with beginning. No other Key captures the duality of dissolution and renewal so elegantly.

The sun dies in the west, yet reappears in the east.
Death is followed by sunrise.
Ending is immediately followed by beginning.

This is the ancient Hermetic formula of Solve et Coagula, encoded into the anatomy of nature itself.

The Spirit-Mind-Body- rising above all.

I AM The Solar Spirit and not seeking one! I animate "bodies" in my name of "I Am"! Bodies allow intimacy with all measured creation and turn information into experience, by in-form-action. Experience builds Wisdom and death is merely a wise alchemical change.

-Eli

The Universal Law of Key 13

Thus Key 13 cannot be confined to the Piscean Age. Its symbols point to universal processes:

  • the cyclic motion of the Life-Force,

  • the dissolution of outdated forms,

  • the stripping down to essence,

  • the reconstitution of identity,

  • and the forward movement of consciousness.

Death operates in all Aeons:

  • in the Age of Taurus with its sacrificial bulls,

  • in the Age of Aries with its warrior-kings,

  • in the Age of Pisces with its hierarchies and faith,

  • and now in Aquarius, where the personality dissolves into a more fluid and holographic Selfhood.

Key 13 is the law that underwrites them all.

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The Death Card-Key 13, during a reading, suggests:

  • Time, Age, and transformation.
  • Rarely does it symbolize physical death and only if borne out by the accompanying cards.
  • For the Querent, this is the principle of letting go and moving on.
  • A rebirth out of old conditions. 
  • A type of transitional metamorphosis which destroys something old to build something new.
  •  The Realization of Life Power as it is released from past confines and revitalized by change and regeneration.
  • Inner wisdom and consistency.
  • Moving forward.
  • Freedom to change.

If reversed:

  • Fear of Death (the root of all fears and phobias such as fear of discomfort, fear of loss, fear of rejection/abandonment, and phobias place on beings as death).

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  • How to use Tarot as a portal to meditative pathworking and astral temple building

  • Rituals, spreads, and practices that bring gnosis, guidance, and transformation

  • How to build your personal mystical system, rooted in self-authority and Divine resonance

📚 What You’ll Need to Begin:

  • The Qabalistic Tarot: A Textbook of Mystical Philosophy by Robert Wang

  • A Thoth Tarot deck (Crowley-Harris edition preferred)

  • A Book of Shadows or personal journal

  • A desire to know thyself through the Solar Flame

🌟 Is This Class for You?

Yes — if you are:

  • A beginner with a soul-call to the Thoth deck, but no formal training

  • An experienced reader seeking depth, ritual, and Hermetic context

  • A mystic ready to reclaim your path through archetype, symbol, and gnosis

  • Anyone craving one-on-one spiritual mentorship in the Western Esoteric Tradition

💠 Investment in the Self — Not in Gold

At The Tarot of Eli, money is never the gatekeeper of gnosis.

These teachings are offered on a sliding scale, because every soul ready to walk the Path deserves a guide. You are not buying a class — you are answering the call of your Soul.

If you feel the fire of this journey within, reach out. Let’s find a way that works for your means. No sincere aspirant will be turned away for lack of coin.

🕊️ The true currency of this Master Class is your will to become who you truly are.

📬 How to Begin Your Journey

Email eli@elitarotstrickingly.com
to request your resonance mapping session, check availability, and discuss the exchange that fits your path.

3 Western Hermetic Tarot and Magick Websites Helping People become more magic and less tragic since 2010.

Traditional Tarot Card Comparisons blog.

Tarot Website Home page, Tarot Store, Master Tarot Classes, and layout page, and nontraditional Tarot Card Comparisons blog.

Western Hermetic Magick Ritual and Invocation website and magick blogs.