The Great Bed of Ware, mentioned in Shakespeare's Twelfth Night, is no longer in the Victoria and Albert Museum where for years it has snuggled close to Constable's depiction of Salisbury Cathedral. It has been returned to its Hertfordshire origins, which to me makes a lot of sense, and for which I offer my gratitude to the wisdom of the V & A. Which brings me to another far greater conundrum in the realm of museums and their plunder. I believe that Lord Elgin's "gift" to the British Museum, the Elgin Marbles, should be returned to Athens. I would quite happily view well-made moulded copies in London (akin to the reproduction room at the V & A with its "Michaelangelo David", "Ghiberti Doors" and "tombs of Richard the Lionheart and Eleanor of Aquitaine from Fontevraud".
Of course, it opens the can of worms, where do we stop?
Of course, it opens the can of worms, where do we stop?
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