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So I studied Elizabethan jewelry, and even made several visits to the fabulous jewelry rooms in the Victoria and Albert Museum in London. I decided to model my fictional jewel in a style dripping in sentiment, a style that would appeal to the romantic nature of a young woman living in the early 19th century. (See the picture, above.) The Mallory Heart of Her Scandalous Affair is a large heart-shaped ruby suspended from a lover's knot of diamonds. (The original title of the manuscript was The Lover's Knot.) All of the sentimental devices incorporated into the brooch are typical of Elizabethan jewels. In fact, many of the devices we still associate with romantic love, and which can often be traced back to ancient times, first found widespread popularity in jewelry in the 16th century. The heart had long been used as a symbol of love. The crown on top of the heart symbolized loyalty. The piercing arrows represent Cupid's arrows piercing the heart and causing the victim to fall passionately in love. The lover's knot from which the Mallory Heart is suspended is another ancient symbol: two paths meet, cross, cross again, interweaving, just as the lives of two lovers become intertwined. (The Elizabethans often wore large, heavy chains with links made of lover's knots.) And if all of that was not sentimental enough, I added an enamel ribbon around the heart with the message "Perfectus Amor Non Est Nisi Ad Unum," which translates as, "True love knows but one." (This was taken from the late 17th century book, Emblemata Amatorio: Emblems of Love in Four Languages, by Phillips Ayres.) All of these elements of the fictional Mallory Heart are in keeping with the type of court jewelry that was produced during the 16th century. The perfect love token for a game of hearts.
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