Three of Swords
-
Pictorial Key to the Tarot
A.E. Waite -
The Tarot
S. L. MacGregor Mathers -
General Book of the Tarot
A. E. Thierens
Three of Swords
Description
Three swords piercing a heart; cloud and rain behind.
Divinatory Meanings
Removal, absence, delay, division, rupture, dispersion, and all that the design signifies naturally, being too simple and obvious to call for specific enumeration.
Divinatory Meanings - Reversed
Mental alienation, error, loss, distraction, disorder, confusion.
Additional Divinatory Meanings
For a woman, the flight of her lover.
Additional Meanings - Reversed
A meeting with one whom the Querent has compromised; also a nun.
Three of Swords
Divinatory Meanings
Three of Swords - A Nun, Separation, Removal, Rupture, Quarrel.
Divinatory Meanings - Reversed
Error, Confusion, Misrule, Disorder.
Three of Swords
Tradition
Departure, absence, rupture, delay, division, removal, being-far-away. Also aversion, hatred, disgust, etc. Contrarieties, opposition, unsociable qualities, gruffness, separation, etc. Reversed: Mental worries, troubles and even alienation. Error, mistake, loss. A nun.
Theory
The element of Earth on the Third house acts in the way of the mind and mental processes, and must appear as 'troubles,' etc., because it gives the feeling of the mind being burdened, which might easily go as far as oppression. If the burden becomes too heavy, either the body or the soul may suffer severely, and pain, affliction or mental aberration may ensue. This card must generally mean bad news too, the message which brings news of the affliction. It may be a corrective to a too easy and volatile imagination. It will in most cases denote some sickness, as a result of the pressure or oppressed feeling in the mind or in circumstances in general. It may be the result of worrying. The house of Gemini also suggests some suffering on account of distance, separateness, being far from one other. And the oppressed mind, which cannot have its way, may easily denote the spiritual condition of a nun or some one who takes refuge within the precincts of a monastery. In this case, however, the motives are not of the more elevated or exalted order: there is spitefulness, vexation, bitterness on account of unrealised hopes, want of idealism. So this does not indicate the idealistic type of monasticism. The card typifies the worries of the lesser sort of mind, also small talk, evil thought, the wrestling of the inferior mind with matter and all that may be expected from it.
Conclusion
Oppression, worries, being burdened, baffled hopes, troubles, tendency to separateness, rupture and seclusion, pessimism. Removal, absence, delay. Small talk, bitter and evil thought, sickness; in bad cases alienation. Error of judgment, wrong opinion, hatred, aversion, etc. In general: affliction. Scheming, but not in a good sense.