08 August 2009
A Heart in the Silver Case
I have of late been skimming about in, not really reading, a book by Cliff Sloan and David McKean about the Supreme Court's decision in MARBURY v. MADISON. The book is titled, appropriately enough, The Great Decision.
Anyway, I have happened upon this bit. After describing Chief Justice John Marshall's devotion to his wife, Polly Marshall, nee Ambler, the authors write of one possible exception to a life of fidelity.
"In his stay in Paris during the XYZ Affair, Marshall lodged with the Marquise de Villette, who had been raised by Voltaire and who kept Voltaire's heart in a silver case in her sitting room. Marshall was thoroughly enthralled with the Marquise, leading to speculation that they may have had an affair ...."
Ewww. She kept a heart (never bloody well mind whose!) in a silver case in her sitting room? Well, we should at least be glad she didn't have it in a bronze case. That would just be weird.
The XYZ Affair had its own fascinations, no doubt but I don't see how Marshall could have kept up with the intrigue if he was lodging in a home with a dead guy's heart lying around.
By the way, yes I'm aware that The New York Times has sacked Ben Stein. I'll save my discussion of this much-deserved firing for Thursday. Watch for it.
Anyway, I have happened upon this bit. After describing Chief Justice John Marshall's devotion to his wife, Polly Marshall, nee Ambler, the authors write of one possible exception to a life of fidelity.
"In his stay in Paris during the XYZ Affair, Marshall lodged with the Marquise de Villette, who had been raised by Voltaire and who kept Voltaire's heart in a silver case in her sitting room. Marshall was thoroughly enthralled with the Marquise, leading to speculation that they may have had an affair ...."
Ewww. She kept a heart (never bloody well mind whose!) in a silver case in her sitting room? Well, we should at least be glad she didn't have it in a bronze case. That would just be weird.
The XYZ Affair had its own fascinations, no doubt but I don't see how Marshall could have kept up with the intrigue if he was lodging in a home with a dead guy's heart lying around.
By the way, yes I'm aware that The New York Times has sacked Ben Stein. I'll save my discussion of this much-deserved firing for Thursday. Watch for it.
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Knowledge is warranted belief -- it is the body of belief that we build up because, while living in this world, we've developed good reasons for believing it. What we know, then, is what works -- and it is, necessarily, what has worked for us, each of us individually, as a first approximation. For my other blog, on the struggles for control in the corporate suites, see www.proxypartisans.blogspot.com.
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