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Phryné
by Bernard Marcoux, Sainte-Adèle, Québec
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Phryné, Greek courtesan from the 4th century BC, mistress of
master sculptor Praxiteles, was so beautiful that she served as
a
model when Praxiteles decided to give shape and face to the
goddess Aphrodite.
Accused of impiety, Phryné appeared before
the Heliasts, Athenian judges who sat at sunrise (the Greek word
Helios means
sun).
Jean Léone Gérôme, 1861
Her lawyer defended her to the best of his
capacity, but failed to really convince the judges of her
innocence.
With no more resources, he decided to undress the
beautiful courtesan. The Heliasts, dazzled by her incomparable
beauty,
immediately declared her innocent, as a woman of such
beauty could only tell the truth.
Thus, truth is always beautiful, and beauty is always true.
Dummy
A x x x x
A 10 8
x x x
x x
You
Q 10
K J x x x
A K x
A x x
You play 4 , with opponents silent in the auction, and LHO leads
the Queen of diamonds.
Count your losers: 1 spade, 1 heart, 1
diamond and 1 or 2 clubs. 5 losers, that’s a lot.
You probably can ruff a club in dummy, which eliminates a loser,
but you still have to find the Queen of hearts.
After ruffing a
club in dummy, you need to find the heart Queen. So with this
line of play, you make 1 spade, 5 hearts (subject
to finding the
Queen), 2 diamonds, 1 club and 1 club ruffed: 10 tricks.
But this line doesn’t appeal to you, it lacks flexibility, it is
not natural, it is complicated.
Moreover, after playing Ace of
clubs and a club, opponents will come back diamond, establishing
their trick in that suit.
You win the second diamond, ruff a
club and then what? Spade to your Queen? Opponents take their
king and cash their
diamond trick and you still have to find the
Queen of hearts. No, this line is not elegant. There must be
something simpler,
more natural, more… beautiful.
While you think, opponents waiting patiently, Phryné walks in
your mind: to convince the judges, she just unveiled her charm
and beauty.
You cannot stop thinking that the answer to your
problem lies in these simple words: beauty seduces because it is
the truth,
and truth dazzles with its beauty. The judges, before
the perfect curves of divine Phryné, could only agree: she was
so
beautiful that she could only tell the truth.
Perfect forms are perfectly smooth, without rough edges: curves,
bends, harmony, music, perfect, eurhythmy. Your mind plays
with
these thoughts: just remove the veils and the truth will appear,
naked, indisputable.
You count again but this time, your
winners: 1 spade, 4 hearts, 2 diamonds and 1 club: 8 winners.
If the King of Spades is on your right, you will make your
Queen, 9 tricks.
It means going to dummy to play a spade to
your Queen. Then you must return to dummy a second time to cash
the Ace
(after unblocking the Queen in your hand).
Suddenly, your heart races, and the emotion you feel convinces
you that you have finally seen the truth.
And this line is so
beautiful, so smooth, it appeals to you immediately. You are
certain this is the right course of play, the only
one, the true
one.
You play a little heart to dummy, LHO plays small, you insert
the 10, it wins! Then, as in a dream, little spade to your
hand.
RHO rises with the King and returns a diamond. You win
your King, unblock the Queen of Spades and play the Jack of
hearts.
LHO covers, dummy wins as RHO provides the 9. You then
have the opportunity, what am I saying?, the luxury of playing a
small spade that you ruff with the King of hearts.
You then
play small heart to the 8 in dummy, cash your 2 good spades and
claim 11 tricks !
What beauty, what incredible magic. The four hands:
Dummy
A x x x x
A 10 8
x x x
x x
LHO
RHO
x x
K J 9 x
Q x x
9 x
Q J
10 x x x x
K J 10 x x x
Qx
You
Q 10
K J x x x
A K x
A x x
You see that your first line of play (club ruff) would not work,
getting overruffed by RHO. Even if you ruff with the 10, you go
down.
Often, at the bridge, we refuse to see, to submit ourselves to
the evidence, we choose to be blind and deaf.
Often, the cards
tell us how to play, how to handle them: we just have to watch
and listen.
Do cards have an inherent beauty, an underlying
harmony, that we have to discover and follow, like a piece by
Mozart or Bach?
Complicated lines of play resemble the
convoluted language of lawyers, tedious, tortuous, where
sentences end up not saying
anything.
What is complicated is
never beautiful.
The Heliastes understood all that.
They refused all the
lawyer’s quibbling which obscured the truth. When Phryné showed
herself in all her splendour, they had to
accept the evidence of
the truth.
At bridge, cards always tell the truth.
What about lawyers? Well…
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