Jesters have an interesting history, and there's more to them as a symbol than just wacky comedians, jugglers and alleviators of boredom in a world before iThings.The Fool is nobody's fool. The Jester's role was a complicated one. As well as providing entertainment they could be storytellers and keepers of oral traditions. They had licence to criticise the royalty they served through their humour. It was the jester who pointed out the inconvenient truths in an era when others may have been too worried about their own title, land, or the status of their head vis a vis attachment to their body to speak out. Sometimes the jester was in charge of imparting bad news - such as a military defeat - to the throne, while the rest of the court cowered from the monarchy's fury.
If a jester shows up in the bottom of a cup, it can signify that the person being read for is also, in their own way, a teller of inconvenient truths. They might be a journalist or whistleblower, an academic working with radical ideas or new research that will turn the accepted way things are done on their head. It suggests that what you do or say may not be what those in power (which could mean anyone from the boss to the popular kids at school) want done or said.
The Jester can also be a warning to be aware of the politics and power plays going on around you. The historical jester was able to get away with his criticism of his master because it was accurate and well observed, and couched in satire and wit. Watch your footing - even if your shoes have bells on.
Image: Anafesto Rossi as Rigoletto, 1911, from the State Library of New South Wales collection on Flickr Commons.










