LITERATAROT ELISABETH CHERRY OWEN IL GIUDIZIO
XX Judgment
Pilgrim
Judgment is a rather puzzling card; often it is necessary to transcend
the obvious Rider-Waite-Smith traditional “second coming” ideas, to
realize it is a card of thresholds and possibilities. The moment
depicted here presents a time for personal review and an opportunity for
change or movement in a new direction.
In 1912 a mysterious red haired man named simply Mr. Pilgrim and his
companion, Lady Quartermaine, arrived at the Burgholzli Psychiatric
Clinic in Zurich. After numerous suicide attempts, Mr. Pilgrim has
arrived to be treated by Carl Jung. The story of the main character is
told through direct narrative, flashbacks and journal entries; he claims
to be immortal and without a specific gender. He has been a disabled
shepherd who encountered the levitating St. Teresa of Avila in a tree, a
stained glass artist at Chartres, the model for the Mona Lisa, and a
resident of the famous Cheyne Walk in Edwardian London. Pilgrim is
unspeakably weary and wants to die. Immortality was his punishment for
observing the gods mating in the Tree of Life in the Garden. Finally,
there is a sign it may be his time to go and he escapes Jung’s clinic.
He leaves the doctor a note, which contains the central core of what he
has learned on earth:
“My dear Herr Doktor Blockhead,
…The so-called Mysteries have been with us forever. There is not a
society on the face of the earth nor of time that does not and did not
have its own version of what these Mysteries reveal of the Great Spirit,
God, the gods and their relationship to our lives – and our lives to
theirs. Sun-dancing, circumcision, birth itself, animal and human
sacrifice, virginity, Ra, Raven, Tarot, Voodoo, I Ching, Zen, totems
personal and tribal, the cult of Mary and the cult of Satan – the list
is endless. In modern times, we call such Mysteries art. Our greatest
shamans of the moment are Rodin, Stravinsky (much as I hate his music)
and Mann. And what else are they telling us but: go back and look again.
In time, these shamans will be replaced by others – but all speaking in
a single voice. It was ever thus. But no one listens.”
Through his encounter with Pilgrim, Jung – his imagination freed – comes
to believe in his own theory of the Collective Unconscious. Pilgrim
after liberating the Mona Lisa from the Louvre and setting fire to the
Chartres, takes his leave of this earth and is presumably successful.
Bio (CV)
While Southern bred-in-the-bone, Elizabeth took a leap of faith in 2003
and moved from Louisiana to coastal Maine, which she believes to be her
soul landscape. She lives in the woods with three cats and various wild
creatures; just this summer was graced with the gift of having a moose
calmly traverse her yard. She has made collage-like art quilts for
nearly 25 years with embedded biographical references. Her work has been
shown both in the United States and Europe. Accidentally veering into
mixed media has caused greater distraction and more accumulation of
ephemera (i.e.-stuff and clutter). |