The Fool

Solitude, truth, and the quiet lantern of inner light.

After the outward motion of The Chariot and the calm courage of Strength, the Fool now turns inward.
The Hermit represents the phase of the journey where external answers no longer suffice. It is the path of contemplation — a time to step back from the noise and return to one’s own centre.

In the Rider–Waite–Smith deck (1909), the Hermit stands alone atop a mountain, cloaked in grey, holding a lantern that illuminates only a small circle of light. Inside the lantern glows the six-pointed star — the light of wisdom, self-awareness, and the divine spark within.
The staff in his other hand symbolises guidance and authority gained through experience.

Earlier decks, such as the Tarot de Marseille, depicted him as L’Hermite, a wandering monk with a lantern — the seeker of truth and inner clarity. In the Thoth Tarot, he carries a serpent-staff and an orb of radiant light, showing wisdom as both earthly and cosmic.

Across lineages, The Hermit represents retreat for renewal — the sacred practice of turning inward to listen for what is real and lasting beneath the surface.

a closer look

Symbolism
  • The lantern – illumination of inner truth; light born from experience.

  • The staff – stability, discipline, and the authority of self-knowledge.

  • The mountain – the summit of understanding, gained through perseverance.

  • The cloak – protection of solitude; the inner life kept sacred.

  • The light’s reach – the truth that guides only one step at a time.

The Hermit represents the wisdom of solitude — the realisation that clarity arises in quiet, not in constant movement.
He is the teacher who listens before he speaks, the seeker who values authenticity over appearance.

Spiritually, he embodies the principle of illumination from within. His lantern doesn’t expose the entire path; it reveals only enough light for the next step — reminding us that guidance often unfolds gradually, through faith and patience.

In study or reflection, The Hermit calls us to pause, review, and distil. He encourages discernment: to separate the essential from the unnecessary, the eternal from the temporary.
He is not the absence of life, but the deep rhythm beneath it.

  • Number: 9 – completion, insight, introspection

  • Element: Earth – grounding, solitude, wisdom through experience

  • Astrology: Virgo – analysis, discernment, purification

Having learned outer mastery and inner strength, the Fool retreats to integrate it all.
The Hermit teaches that solitude is not isolation but refinement — the stage where the traveller turns experience into wisdom.


Here, the Fool begins to understand that light is not only found in the world, but within the self.

The Hermit invites you to honour silence as a teacher. In the pause, understanding deepens; in stillness, truth gathers shape.

He asks:

  • What might I hear if I stopped trying to fill the silence?

  • Which parts of my life need space to breathe and integrate?

  • What have I learned through experience that I haven’t yet named as wisdom?

  • How can I protect time for solitude without feeling alone?

The Hermit reminds us that inner light doesn’t demand attention — it simply shines.
His lesson is a quiet one: that wisdom, once found, is not loud or hurried, but steady and clear, guiding the way home to oneself.