If he is a young man the chariot may represent his 'first car' experience: this journey may well lead to even greater foolishness, if this is the first time he is living away from home, experiments with drugs and drink, has sex, and grows facial hair, if he can. Hopefully this journey won't end in disaster. Hence the significance often placed on the direction of the horses or other animal pulling it. They can represent decision, indecision, two balancing poles, two poles to be balanced, depending on where you look. The rider may or may not have reins. What I love most about this card is that everyone who's written about tarot or designed a deck has had a go at it, leaving a lot of conflicting information hanging around. Perhaps the best synthesis of this is that this card represents many things to many people, with different directions or journeys and apparently conflicting interpretations. So it may therefore underscore the nebulous nature of divination and the importance in a reading of finding out how the querent understands the question and image.
Another tradition refers to the charioteer in a more martial sense: this places the journey in a war context. Of course whether the charioteer is armoured to protect himself or others is another question!
(Apologies if the pictures on this come out weird: blogger is acting very strangely today and I really don't know why!)
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