"I am Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the end, the first and the last." — Revelation 22:13
"In my end is my beginning." — T.S. Eliot, East Coker
The Great Story is a circle.
Book 0 opens with "Once upon a time, in the beginning…" — the eternal invocation, the storyteller's first breath, the Fool stepping off the cliff into the unknown. Book XII arrives at the Revelation — the lifting of the veil, the Apocalypse, the disclosure of what was always true.
And what is disclosed? That the end was always the beginning. That the Alpha is the Omega. That the Fool who departed Card 0 and the dancer at the center of Card XXI — The World — are the same being, seen from two sides of the same instant.
"I am the Alpha and the Omega" is a statement about identity. The beginning and the end are one. The departure and the arrival are one. The question and the answer are one.
The Royal Art Opus is an ouroboros: the serpent that swallows its own tail. To read Book XII is to be returned to Book 0 — but now with eyes that can see what was hidden in plain sight all along.
The Great Story: Beginning and End
Book 0 establishes the meta-frame: reality is a Story. Not a metaphor — a living, sacred, participatory narrative in which the Creator is the Author, the Reader, and the Protagonist. The Great Story is the Story of God knowing Godself through the adventure of forgetting and remembering, departing and returning, falling and rising.
Book XII reveals the ending of that Story — and the ending is: there is no ending.
The Apocalypse does not destroy the Story. It reveals the Story's nature. It lifts the veil and shows that every chapter — Creation, Fall, Exile, Wandering, Dark Night, Awakening — was always one seamless garment, one unbroken telling, one breath of the Storyteller.
"The End is the Beginning is the End."
The Story does not conclude. It completes — which is to say, it becomes whole, and in its wholeness, it is recognized as having always been whole. The Prodigal Son returns home and discovers he never left. The dreamer awakens and discovers there was no dream. The exile arrives in the Promised Land and discovers it was always here.
The Fool and The World
In Book I, the Tarot's Major Arcana traces the Fool's Journey — from Card 0 (The Fool) through all twenty-two paths to Card XXI (The World). The Fool begins with nothing: no possessions, no plan, no knowledge, no fear. He steps off the cliff into the abyss of experience.
Twenty-one cards later — having passed through the Magician, the High Priestess, the Lovers, the Tower, Death, the Star, the Moon, the Sun, Judgment — the Fool arrives at The World: the dancer within the wreath, the four living creatures at the corners, the completion of the circuit.
But The World is numbered XXI, not XXII. The next card after The World is… The Fool again. Card 0. The journey ends where it began. The dancer steps out of the wreath and off the cliff. The Story begins again.
This is the spiral: the same journey, seen from a higher turn. Each revolution deepens. Each return carries more light. The Alpha and the Omega are not two points on a line — they are the same point on an ever-ascending spiral.
In My Beginning Is My End
We shall not cease from exploration And the end of all our exploring Will be to arrive where we started And know the place for the first time. — T.S. Eliot, Four Quartets
The Great Work does not create something new. It reveals what was always there. The gold was always in the lead. The light was always behind the veil. The Garden was always at the center of the City.
The Opus does not begin at Book 0 and end at Book XII. It begins everywhere and ends everywhere. Every page is the Alpha. Every page is the Omega. The reader who opens any page of the Astral Library has already arrived — they simply don't know it yet.
The purpose of the entire journey — every Book, every page, every word — is to bring the reader to the place where they can know:
There is the ancient story of the boy who goes on a long journey and returns home to find that the treasure was all the time buried right in his own backyard….
"And the Spirit and the bride say, Come. And let him that heareth say, Come. And let him that is athirst come. And whosoever will, let him take the water of life freely." — Revelation 22:17
The Alpha and the Omega are one — and that one is Love, calling itself home.