I did a woodcut print a number of years ago (to be posted in one week) called, βIt was Raining Out.β In the image, a boy pulls a girl by the hand. He points to a ladder which leads to the attic. In the attic, there is a trunk. Outside, umbrellas fall like rain.
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It is the attic, the endless attic where all toys go when they are outgrown, where the works of years past are laid to wait for the minds of future generations. There,Β the treasures are endless.
When it rains out, the boy and the girl sneak into the attic, close the door, and open an old wooden trunk, origin of all adventure. In the trunk lie the treasures of the mind, for it is filled with papersβ letters, photographs, journals, cardsβ papers covered in writing and images.
One rainy day, the boy picks out a small carved wooden box. A box within a box. He opens it. Inside are slips of paper. On each piece, writ with fine fountain-pen script, is a terse aphorism: a riddle.
The girl takes the one on top and reads it aloud. ββ¦β
βA riddle,β says the boy. βBut what could it mean?β He takes the next, reads it. ββ¦β
βI wonder how many there areβ says the girl. She dumps the papers and arranges them in a grid on the floor to count. βTwenty-two.β
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The problem was, I had no basis for filling in the ellipses. I had never seen a tarot deck. I knew there were twenty-two pictures. I knew there was a fool. I didnβt think the sixteen faces and forty numbers were actually part of the tarot deck. I had some research to do.
I went into a store that specialized in tarot decks and went through their albums of sample cards. Nothing caught my eye. They were all 78-card decks and none of them were special. At last I found a little hand-written booklet with a red lion on the cover and the words, βTwenty-Two Keys of the Tarot.β THIS was what I was looking for.
βDo you have the deck for this booklet?β I asked the clerk.
βItβs somewhere in the back,β he said, disappearing through a door beyond the bookshelves. When he returned, he handed me a small white box. βJust one,β he said. βItβs been here for ages. Thereβs no price on it.β
βMay I look?β I asked. I was filled with that nervous sort of energy that happens when everything is absolutely right. It made my hands shake as I opened the box flap, and I was too jittery to see anything beyond the print quality (real ink on real paper) and the hand-written date. The deck was exactly 20 years old. βHow much?β I asked.
βName your price,β said the clerk.
βTen dollars,β I said, knowing nothing about anything. I wasnβt the sort of person who bought things. The clerk nodded, rung me up, and slipped the deck into a small brown paper bag. I walked home, glowing brilliantly like the sun in the heavens.