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Saturday, December 6, 2025

The Heart Beneath the Glass

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Gabriel Jeroschewitz, November 16th, 2025, Inspired by Mary Shelley

The Heart Beneath the Glass

I first saw her in the winter of 1792.
Florence was shrouded in the kind of cold that makes the air taste of stone dust and the Arnos water run sluggish, like oil. I had come for paintings—Titians Venus, Botticellis mother of seas—and stayed, as so many did, for the whispers of a new marvel housed in the Museum for Physics and Natural History. They called her La Venere Anatomica—the Anatomical Venus.

She lay beneath a windowed dome, as if in a coffin from which she might awaken at any moment. Her skin, pale as candle wax yet somehow warm in hue, gleamed beneath the morning light filtered through high windows. A chain of pearls encircled her throat, its lustre faint against the uncanny smoothness of her flesh. Her hair—real human hair, it was said—tumbled in loose coils across her bare shoulders, arranged artfully yet with the disobedience of something that once belonged to a living head. She was beautiful in the way marble statues are lovely—perfect, immutable, and wholly indifferent to the trembling mortal heart.

Tourists muttered around me, shuffling in devotion or curiosity, but I did not hear them. My attention was fixed on the delicate rise and fall carved into her breastplate, the illusion of breath held just long enough to fool the eye. I knew, even then, that it was not only beauty on display. It was something else—a test, perhaps, in how far beauty could be stretched over truth before the mind recoils.

The docent, a thin man whose voice carried like dry parchment, made his way through the crowd. He spoke of Clemente Susini and Felice Fontana, masters of their strange art, describing the seven removable layers of the Venus as if recounting the petals of a divine flower. The words odour-free,” “incorruptible” rose in the cold air, oddly clerical in tone, as though holiness were now a matter of preservation rather than faith.

And then, deftly, almost reverently, the man removed her wax breastplate.

The room seemed to tilt.

Beneath the smooth ivory of her outer form was a nest of organs sculpted with obsessive care: heart, liver, pancreas, each painted to the precise shade of living tissue. Across them, silk threads and linen fibres webbed delicately, imitating veins, nerves—an entire universe of sensation frozen in place. No seam was crude, no accent rushed. What Susini had made was not mockery, nor horror—it was the body as a cathedral.

But it was the last layer that undid me.

Nestled deep within her waxen womb, like a puzzle piece never meant to be displaced, lay a perfect fetus. Eternal, untouched by the decay of time. It curled in repose, and I felt—perhaps for the first time in my life—the full gravity of human stillness. She was not merely a Venus; she was the memory of life interrupted before it began.

I had been standing beside a young physician when that final layer was revealed. He inhaled sharply, eyes wide, though not in shock, in longing. We exchanged no words then, but later—outside, on the marble steps—he confessed he had studied medicine under Fontanas direction. I dreamed,” he said, once, of opening the womb of a woman who had died in childbirth. She was beautiful—too beautiful for the hands of the living to defile. This Venus… she is that dream, preserved without sin.”

His name was Lorenzo. His voice carried sadness, but not shame. I told myself I ought to be disturbed by his yearning, but there was something in it that mirrored my own—the way we both saw her not as an object, but as someone caught between states: woman and sculpture, saint and specimen. Death and desire held her equally.

We met again in the museum a week later. We stood before the Venus longer than was polite, watching tourists shuffle past in quick gulps of sensation. He told me bits of her making—how some of her organs had been modelled before science could name them, how Fontana believed this would end dissections altogether. She is incorruptible,” he whispered. Imagine such faith in a thing of wax.”

In those weeks, I learned the truth about the museum: it was not science alone, nor art alone, but something more profound. Florence, after three centuries under the Medici, now wore Enlightenment like a fresh robe—and yet in this room, beauty was not separated from death. The Venus did not need to breathe; she inspired breath in others.

It was Lorenzo who quietly suggested that we see her in private. A request, when made to the right attendants, was possible for scholars—though I was no scholar, only a man capable of convincing others I was. We paid in coin, waited for dusk, and entered the hall alone.

Shadows swam across the walls, thrown by the oil lamps. The lustre of her skin was deeper now, her hair blacker against the pale curve of her cheek. Lorenzo touched the glass of her case, as if to wake her.

Do you think she feels it?” he asked.

I did not laugh. She feels what we give her,” I said.

We removed the dome and the layers in silence. His hands were steady, unafraid. Mine trembled—not in fear, but in something older, stranger. When her heart lay revealed, I thought of the strange symmetry of its shape, how it seemed to wait for a pulse that would never come.

And yet in that room, lit by lamplight and the scent of melting wax, I swear she was alive. Not in the sense of breathing, but in presence—like the Venus of Botticellis canvas stepping from her painted sea, or the goddess from Titians bed turning her eyes to meet yours.

We lingered over the seventh layer. The fetus seemed smaller in the dim light, impossibly fragile. Lorenzos voice was low: I think she dreams. Of a shore she will never see. Of a child she will never bear.”

He closed her again, piece by piece, until the final breastplate came to rest over her immaculate torso. We stood, heads bowed, as if at mass.

Outside, the night had dropped upon Florence with its quiet procession of lamps and shadowy alleys. We walked together, and I found I could not speak of what we had seen. It was not an experience in need of telling; it was one meant to be carried, like a relic in the pocket of the mind.

Lorenzo left the city months later. War had spread its claws across the continent, and physicians were in demand. I returned to the museum alone, more than once, always stopping before her case.

Years passed. The Enlightenment gave way to other ages—each drawing its own lines between art and science, beauty and truth. And yet, even now, she lies there. Supine in her coffin, pearls at her throat, hair flowing like a river across the slope of her shoulder. Seven layers between the world and the quiet unborn at her core.

I believe Lorenzo was right: she dreams.

Not of us, who come and go with our own fragile hearts, but of the moment her creators hands gave her form. In that instant, she was both an offering to God and a mirror to man—a work of love, sharpened by death.

And for those of us who have stood before her—alone, or in the hush of anothers company—there is a sense that she keeps something of us as well. A touch against glass. A mouth that almost spoke. The shadow of a longing that will never be returned, yet will never fade.

She remains. And beneath her perfect surface, the heart still waits.

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