KariRoad
I've often wondered why Pamela Colman Smith would have added the "noise" lines at the Bell end of the Angel's trumpet on her Judgement card, but considering her deep roots in Irish and Celtic tradition, perhaps she chose this way to subtly add the AWEN symbol to her illustration.
Click on LINK to View:
According to Wikipedia:
Awen derives from the Indo-European root *-uel, meaning 'to blow',
and has the same root as the Welsh word awel meaning 'breeze'.
There is a parallel word to 'awen' in Irish, ai, also meaning "poetic inspiration"
which derives from the same ancient root.
Awen is a Welsh word for "(poetic) inspiration".
It is historically used to describe the divine inspiration of bards in the Welsh poetic tradition.
Someone who is inspired, as a poet or a soothsayer, is an awenydd.
Awen - Wikipedia
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Awen
"awen"
Google Search
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&source=hp&q=awen&btnG=Google+Search
Click on LINK to View:
According to Wikipedia:
Awen derives from the Indo-European root *-uel, meaning 'to blow',
and has the same root as the Welsh word awel meaning 'breeze'.
There is a parallel word to 'awen' in Irish, ai, also meaning "poetic inspiration"
which derives from the same ancient root.
Awen is a Welsh word for "(poetic) inspiration".
It is historically used to describe the divine inspiration of bards in the Welsh poetic tradition.
Someone who is inspired, as a poet or a soothsayer, is an awenydd.
Awen - Wikipedia
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Awen
"awen"
Google Search
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&source=hp&q=awen&btnG=Google+Search