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Justice — Tarot card, Soblazn — Sensual Tarot deck
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Justice

Soblazn — Sensual Tarot
fairnessaccountabilitybalanceclarity

A cold mind in a hot body. She sees the truth straight through — and that incorruptible clarity is itself a seduction.

The card's image

On a throne between columns sits Justice — fair-haired, in an openwork crown, a two-handed sword raised point upward, and even scales in her other hand. A scarlet gown with a high slit bares a slender leg and shows translucent over the belly; her ankles are crossed, her back straight, and her gaze calm and piercing — it reads you down to the very bottom. The sword and scales in her hands are mind and heart, punishment and mercy, perfectly balanced by a single firm will. Justice is about truth, responsibility, cause and effect; about an honest weighing in which each receives exactly what they deserve. She does not seduce on purpose — she simply knows her own worth and does not lower the sword before flattery or sweet words. And it is precisely this unassailable clarity that stirs more strongly than open nakedness: before such a woman it is impossible to lie, impossible to play a part — there remains only to be real. To earn a "yes" from one who sees through you and judges by the truth is worth a great deal, and so it is priceless. Her cold, clear mind in that hot body is the most exquisite and dangerous of seductions.

Interpretation

Justice sits at the exact midpoint of the Major Arcana — the eleventh of twenty-two cards — and this placement is not accidental. It is the hinge of the whole sequence, the moment when the first arc of experience (the outer world, fortune, power) gives way to the inner arc (transformation, dissolution, rebirth). To reach Justice is to arrive at the moment of reckoning, when the sum of every choice you have made is laid on the table and counted. The card does not threaten or console — it simply presents the account.

Justice is closely bound to two neighbors in the Arcana. Wheel of Fortune raises the great question of fate — why did this happen to me? Justice answers: because of what came before. Fate is not arbitrary; it is the shape made by accumulated action. And the Hanged Man who follows is what becomes possible once you accept that answer honestly — the willingness to hang suspended, to let go of your own narrative about who wronged you. Meanwhile, Justice echoes the High Priestess: both sit between twin pillars, both guard a threshold. But where the Priestess holds a secret, Justice holds a verdict. What the Priestess knows silently, Justice says aloud.

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Advice & forecast

The card's advice

When Justice appears, the most useful thing you can do is stop arguing your case — at least for a moment — and genuinely put your own actions on the scale. Not to condemn yourself, but to see clearly. The card rewards honesty above strategy: the person who accurately names their role in what has happened, including the uncomfortable parts, is the one who moves through this card's energy and out the other side. Take the practical steps that are yours to take. Sign what needs signing, say what needs saying, complete what you left undone. The sword is already raised; what matters now is that your hands are steady.

What the forecast holds

What is coming is proportional to what has been. This is not a threat — it is actually a relief, because it means the outcome is knowable and, to a real degree, already shaped by what you have put in. If your efforts have been genuine and your dealings fair, Justice in the future position is one of the more reassuring cards in the deck. If you know there is something unresolved — a debt unpaid, a truth unspoken, a responsibility ducked — this card signals that the moment of settling is approaching. The longer that reckoning has been postponed, the more sharply it arrives. Act from integrity now, while you still have the chance to shape the ledger before it closes.

Justice reversed

When Justice reverses, the scales are still present but no longer level. Something — usually fear, usually pride — has put a finger on one side. The most common expression of this energy is the posture of the perpetual victim: someone who has arranged their inner narrative so that they are always acted upon and never acting, always wronged and never responsible. This is not cynicism to say so; it is simply what the reversed card is pointing at. The freedom that upright Justice offers — the liberation of accepting that you are the sum of your choices — becomes, in reversal, a freedom actively refused. Sometimes the reversal describes external injustice rather than internal: a situation where the rules are being applied selectively, where the powerful escape consequences the powerless cannot, where the letter of the law is weaponized against its spirit. In either case, the shadow of this card is a judgment divorced from genuine discernment — rigid, biased, or hollow. The path back to upright runs through one question asked seriously: what would I see if I looked at my own part in this without flinching?

The card in spreads

The same card reads differently depending on the spread and the question — compare real spreads:

How it differs from Manara

Justice — Rider-Waite-Smith deck
Rider-Waite-SmithJustice
Soblazn — Sensual TarotJustice

In the Milo Manara Erotic Tarot, Justice becomes a scene of intimate power and physical exposure: a figure whose authority is written on the body, whose judgment is charged with desire and vulnerability rather than detachment. The question Manara's version asks is personal and sensory — who holds power over you, and do you submit to it freely? The Rider-Waite image, by contrast, strips the scene of all heat and personality. Its Justice is institutional: robed, still, and wholly impersonal. The sword and scales address not your longing but your ledger. Where Manara's card pulses with body memory and the sting of consequence felt in flesh, the Waite-Smith version is closer to a courtroom — impartial, procedural, and demanding the same standard of everyone.

ManaraSoblazn — Sensual Tarot
SceneAn erotically charged figure whose authority is expressed through the body — exposure, posture, and tension between control and surrenderA robed, enthroned figure flanked by stone pillars, holding raised sword and balanced scales — institutional, still, impersonal
FocusIntimate justice: the power dynamics of desire, the sting of consequence felt in the body, surrender to what is trueCosmic accounting: cause and effect made visible, the impartial weighing of past against future
QuestionWho holds power in this bond, and are you honest about what you want from it?Have you accounted for everything — including your own part in what has happened?

Symbolism & correspondences

Justice corresponds to Libra, the cardinal Air sign ruled by Venus — the one zodiacal figure that is an object rather than a person or animal, a tool of measurement rather than a living being. Libra's energy is oriented entirely toward balance, relationship, and the weighing of competing truths. The Air element places Justice in the domain of the mind and language: this is not an emotional or physical reckoning but a rational one, conducted in the clear light of reason. In the Kabbalistic Tree of Life, Justice is linked to the path of Lamed — the path of correction and adjustment, the movement that restores equilibrium when the system has drifted. Together, these correspondences frame Justice as the card of active, conscious alignment: not the balance that simply happens, but the balance that is chosen.

Element
Air
Astrology
Libra — cardinal Air; the sign of the scales, partnership, and deliberate choice
Arcana
Major

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