oracle of the fables marseille
This oracle was created on dark and stormy night in Sweden in 2013, in the company of family members who were bored. What better way to provide entertainment than to go to the classics? Read more about the creation of this deck below.
oracle of the fables
marseille tarot
Passing the time over the fall break of 2014 with my family in a cabin in the Swedish woods, I had the idea to create an oracle deck of cards based on several timeless sources of wisdom – one being, the Major Arcana of the Tarot.
Having chased after suitably oracular material among the available ancient grimoires and spell books to create a dialogue with the Tarot, I settled on a proven text that always delivers a powerful punch line, especially when we look at the moral of the tale: Aesop’s Fables!
Here is what I then made the family circus do: we divided the 22 major arcana cards between us, and for each card we found a corresponding page in the book of Fables. We then rolled the dice to determine what specific line we would read in conjunction with the card.
An example: In the first round I pulled the card of the High Priestess that has the numerical value of 2.
I then went to page two in the book of fables, and having found “The Cock and the Pearl” I rolled the dice to determine the line number. I got 7 and thus came away with the sentence: “I would rather have a single barleycorn than a peck of pearls.”
We repeated this procedure with all cards, moving progressively through the page numbers in blocks of 22 pages, so that when my turn came to do the Fool, I added his value of 22 to the page number in the fables book, coming up with 45, from which I distilled the sentence, “The idol broke in two.”
In the end we had the following 22 oracular statements emerging from the mouths of the Major Arcana figures:
0/22. “The Idol broke in two.” – The Fool
1. “Raise the pole” – The Magician
2. “I would rather have a single barleycorn than a peck of pearls.” – The High Priestess
3. “Undisturbed by its tail.” – The Empress
4. “The Lion took Androcles to his cave.” – The Emperor
5. “You will dare!” – The Hierophant
6. “I am a bird.” – The Lovers
7. “You can never forget the death of your son.” – The Chariot
8. “I shall suffer for it.” – Strength
9. “The trees were good-natured.” – The Hermit
10. “Come with me to my master!” – The Wheel of Fortune
11. “You will want some refreshments” – Justice
12. “The lion attacked them one by one.” – The Hanged Man
13. “The lion was so tickled at the idea of the mouse.” – Death
14. “Brains, your Majesty!” – Temperance
15. “Be content with your lot.” – The Devil
16. “We want a real King.” – The Tower
17. “Much outcry, little outcome.” – The Star
18. “That fine harness upon you.” – The Moon
19. “All shall dwell together.” – The Sun
20. “Put the Serpent down on the hearth.” – Judgement
21. “Don’t sprawl here!” – The World
The fact that I can’t draw has never stopped me from drawing. So I proceeded to ‘imitate’ the drawings in the Marseille Tarot, especially since the others involved in this game had any wishes to join me for the art.
I finished the whole thing in one sitting. The way I draw is always by way of putting pen to paper directly. No pencil, no drafts, no edits. It is what it is. I’m not a patient person when it comes to these things, and I don’t believe in revising a drawing. Not when what we’re talking about is creating bibliomantic and talismanic art. Change itself must have a hand at it. Also, no more than 2 colors. That’s what I dictated to myself. Since that time I have been faithfully dubbed my method here, ‘one cut, one blood,’ and wrote about it on a number of occasions.
I think I finished this deck here in about 4 hours, between a meal, a walk in the woods, watching Forest Gump on TV, and doing a sun salutation on the porch after a good night’s sleep.
Creating oracles and making cards is an activity that I recommend warmly. If nothing else, then simply because you get to laugh your wits out, every time you take your own deck and look at what it says, both visually and literally.
And mind you, you can also get wiser. You look at your choices, and if you don’t like either of them, you decide to ride into the sunset.
After I finished, and keeping with my ritual with every new deck I ever get, I asked my Oracle of the Fables to show me its mojo. I got the Sun, the Moon, and the Fool below.
Visually the oracle tells me this: who needs words to communicate with? Howling at the moon can also do it. And if it doesn’t, who needs others to miscommunicate with? Take a walk and be free.
Verbally, the cards say the following:
“All shall dwell together. That fine harness upon you. The idol broke in two.”
The appropriate reaction to this can only be an exclamation: ‘Oh, wow!’
NOW WALK
The nice thing about oracles is that they need no interpretation. You go with what you hear. Some would say, you go with your intuitive response. But I don’t like that.
I like to say that, as with any oracle, you go with what you hear. Period. The oracle lore going back thousands of years proves exactly that. The Greeks were not into intuition. They were into action. Listen and watch. If you’re lucky, the obvious will hit you in the head.
In fact, I would argue that the only reason why we bother to read any cards, divine, or look at the stars, is because we want cues for action, not for how we can end up praising ourselves for our intuitive faculties. Unless intuition is defined in terms of clarity, it’s no good. And clarity can only come as a result of listening and watching carefully.
Every time I come upon eulogies and odes to intuition I see that the ones who sing a song to it, sing to their own unstrung egos. I don’t find that very interesting.
So, the Oracle of the Fables Marseille Tarot speaks its truth. And I like what I’m hearing. This oracle walks its talk.
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The limited edition oracle has long been sold out. A few lucky ones got a fine cut version while it lasted. But maybe one of these days I’ll create a more widely available edition, since so many have been asking for it. It’s only a matter of time. If I find it, the time it takes to make it, I’ll act upon this desire.