Mark Hildesly, a seventeenth-century English barrister, left behind a manuscript full of religious exhortations and overstuffed poetry celebrating the sober character “jurisprudent.”  Asking himself whether “exerting of books or babies are best becoming a jurisprudent,” he came down in favor of books.  Hildesly also doodled in the margins—a ship and a woman in profile.  The doodles made Hildesly more real than the “jurisprudent” poems soberly singing of babies forgone.  The poems made Hildesly seem like a source, the doodles like a man.