John Edwards, Gemini behaving badly.
He of the “Two Americas”, with the inherent duplicity of the Twins, called LIAR in 4 inch letters on the front pages of the tabloids. Months ago he was caught by YouTube preening in a mirror. Narcissus, a Gemini without a brother, yearns after his own image, never matures. Dowd in the Times made merciless fun of him for hiring his lover to make videos of himself (“His self-diagnosis of narcissism was weirdly narcissistic . . . ”).
Mentally fluent Twins fill the ranks of Edwards’s profession, lawyering, fascinated by the dynamic of justice’s two-panned scale and the power of the word. As a Gemini, the lawyer enjoys in-betweening and pairing off in so many ways: as an advocate, a mediator, a communicator, a representative, an opponent whose strength lies in the ability to argue either side; also, she exploits to the hilt her network of personal relationships and inter-obligations, contacts and introductions. Some prominent attorneys immediately come to my mind: F. Lee Bailey (10 June 1933, with the Geminian lightness of the aviator/playboy), and Palm Beach’s Robert Montgomery (9 June 1930, who died last week), a tort litigator like Edwards, a Democrat with Republican clients, and the man responsible for the multi-billion dollar finding against the tobacco industry. Closer to Edwards’s current dilemma are two recent New York Attorneys General: Eliot Spitzer (June 10, 1959), who projected an image clear as a bell, then suddenly proved schizoid, two-faced; and Rudolph Giuliani (28 May 1944), whose idiosyncratic infidelities and cellphone antics are the least of his Geminian displays.
(Marilyn Monroe & Donald Trump are also Geminis.)