Strength
Gentleness as power – courage through compassion, not control.
Strength arrives after the forward surge of The Chariot, bringing balance and humility to willpower.
It teaches that real strength is not domination, but inner steadiness — the ability to stay open-hearted even when faced with resistance or fear.
In the Rider–Waite–Smith deck (1909), a serene woman dressed in white gently closes the jaws of a lion. Above her head floats the infinity symbol, echoing that of the Magician. Behind them, a golden landscape stretches wide and calm. The image radiates peace, not struggle — mastery through understanding, not through force.
Earlier decks such as the Tarot de Marseille showed a more direct battle, a woman prying open the lion’s mouth. In contrast, Pamela Colman Smith’s depiction redefined the card: the lion yields because he is met with calm presence, not resistance.
In the Thoth Tarot, this archetype becomes Lust — the ecstatic merging of passion and spirit — yet even there, the core idea remains: life energy embraced, not repressed.
Across lineages, Strength is the power of gentleness — the quiet courage that tames chaos not by command, but by care.
