paradoxx
This is a strange death card, it utilizes some iteresting symbolisim.
Lets start with teh main figure, a skeleton. His attire is pitch black and is also ragged and ripped so light can pass through. He holds his syche by teh blades tip with si right hand and keeps it steady this his left, his right foot stands on a dead twig, unbreaking. A bird, probably a raven or crow, rests on Deaths right hand, at the tip of the very sharp blade. surrounding this strangly serene figure are the last remains of civilization: Gravestones, two skulls (one with a helmet still on), a pillar to some great structure, and teh top of a pyramid barely identifiable. In front of death are even more unusual symbols: A clock buried in the ground, a broken sword and a shattered crown.
The skulls are the passing of corporeal life, wheather in service of antoher or independent. The gravestones are falling apart, even in death life continues upward, bringing everything else down. The clock has stopped, time keeps on ticking but not by our standards. The Sword is broken in the shadow of death, the crown is shattered as the darnkess of the syche falls upon it. The broken sword could represent the failing of the mind, and shattered crown can equal destroyed authrority.
Behind this barren scene that takes place on a stone tiled scene is the sun rising within a square, beyond the square are planets, stars, and the infinite entropity of space.
A very facinating card.
Lets start with teh main figure, a skeleton. His attire is pitch black and is also ragged and ripped so light can pass through. He holds his syche by teh blades tip with si right hand and keeps it steady this his left, his right foot stands on a dead twig, unbreaking. A bird, probably a raven or crow, rests on Deaths right hand, at the tip of the very sharp blade. surrounding this strangly serene figure are the last remains of civilization: Gravestones, two skulls (one with a helmet still on), a pillar to some great structure, and teh top of a pyramid barely identifiable. In front of death are even more unusual symbols: A clock buried in the ground, a broken sword and a shattered crown.
The skulls are the passing of corporeal life, wheather in service of antoher or independent. The gravestones are falling apart, even in death life continues upward, bringing everything else down. The clock has stopped, time keeps on ticking but not by our standards. The Sword is broken in the shadow of death, the crown is shattered as the darnkess of the syche falls upon it. The broken sword could represent the failing of the mind, and shattered crown can equal destroyed authrority.
Behind this barren scene that takes place on a stone tiled scene is the sun rising within a square, beyond the square are planets, stars, and the infinite entropity of space.
A very facinating card.