Sunday:
Knight of Diamonds - the Star - Jane Fairfax
Four things to get organized somehow! The Knight of Diamonds (Pentacles/Coins) - the Taurus-like sober good sense and work ethos. The Star - which seems to be exactly the opposite of the Knight of Diamonds. And why is Jane Fairfax associated with the Star? I harbour the horrible suspicion that it's because of the scene where she plays the piano and sings and is the star of the evening, in the modern sense of the word, and Emma (here: Queen of Diamonds, okay) is so jealous of her. The booklet says nothing whatsoever about the reason for the triple Knight of Diamonds - Star - Jane Fairfax, only gives the most shallow summary of Jane's character.
That's all. Mrs. Jennings might have summed up Jane's life!Jane Fairfax was orphaned as a girl, yet she grows up to sing, play piano, and sew, and marries happily.
Oh dear oh dear, I knew it, it's a pretty dunce, neither tarot substance nor Austen substance, but very easy on the eye.
I must confess now that of all the many Emma adaptations, only the Kate Beckinsale one made any sense to me. the old BBC one was just an audio book with moving pictures - Gwyneth Paltrow's version is a vehicle for her and the whole thing just a fantasy (that tent!!) - Romola Garai is lovely and could have played her differently but it seems the director made her roll her eyes all the time and behave like a modern teenager - and I didn't see that last one. The Garai version also put in too much kitschy non-Austen background information; Mr Woodhouse was ludicrous. Beckinsale had just the right amount of arrogance and unpleasantness because Emma is not supposed to be totally likeable.
And the best thing about the Beckinsale version are the supporting players. This version has the best Miss Bates, the best Mr Woodhouse, and by far the best Jane Fairfax. She is just as imagined her. (Okay, Mr Knightley is the achilles verse of that version, Mark Strong is not really likeable in that role although quite close to the grumpy-but-kind man in the book - closer anyway than divine Jeremy Northam or cute, harmless Johnny Lee Miller).
there are so many misunderstandings about Jane Austen - best shown by the clueless heroine of Lost in Austen who waxes lyrical about the charming times of Jane Austen when there was so much more courtesy in the world, and love won everything. No, not at all, Jane Austen pairs off people according to their status in the world, and marriages that cross class borders are notoriously unhappy. Money is everything. It's a cruel world, women are helpless and have no rights, as Austen shows in her private letters. An adaptation that doesn't even hint at the cruelty of that world is just a marshmallow, a fantasy.
This deck of course swallows the escapist fantasy, and I really regret not getting the older deck when it was available, even though I really hate the art.
Here we have lovely art, a dignified looking Jane Fairfax, and she looks a little surprised to find herself in the position of the Knight of Diamonds (because she was destined to be a governess and work hard?) AND the Star (because she knew to play the piano, sing AND sew?).
It seems to me that the wish to make Jane Fairfax the Star came first, and that they looked at the court cards, and the Knight of Diamonds was left, and they stuck her there.
Monday:
Ace of Diamonds - the World
Well well, now here we have a more convincing pairing. If you want to associate the World with a minor card, the Ace of Diamonds is a fair decision, even clever. Aces open something and the World closes it, but where these two processes meet, there's an opening for light and much potential.
Booklet, please.
One deserves a bouquet when a demanding endeavour has come full circle to success.
Does one indeed? Mrs Hyacinth Bucket would agree
Again, this is the most anemic interpretation of either Ace of Diamonds or The World that one could give. At least one thing can be said for the text: it doesn't club us over the head with new age happiness that makes every card sound exactly the same, i.e., a happiness therapy from start to finish (unfortunately, the lovely Star Tarot comes with a book that explains all the symbols, which is great, and serves all the cards with the same kind of happy-ever-after sauce, which is unfortunate).
Now connecting all this to my very own life. The Knight of Pentacles is one of the cards I get most often - a calling card from my decan, Worry, and a kick in the butt to work harder. To make an effort.
The Star and the World are beautiful cards that everybody loves. They're encouraging - think of the future, think of the end.
It's funny, I still don't regret getting this deck. It's the Harriet Smith of Tarot decks and I can't help liking Harriet Smith.