Supreme Court of the United States
Due to a lapse of appropriations, the Supreme Court Building will be closed to the public until further notice. The Building will remain open for official business.

Today at the Court - Monday, Oct 27, 2025


    Calendar
    Title and navigation
    Title and navigation
    <<<October 2025><<
    October 2025
    SMTWTFS
       1234
    567891011
    12
     
    1415161718
    19202122232425
    262728293031 
           
    Calendar Info/Key

     



    Did You Know...

    “A line poetic...”


    On March 7, 1851, just a few months before his death at age 61, Justice Levi Woodbury wrote an eight-line poem for a “Miss R. D. Smith.” It was not uncommon for Justices to sign or write a note when offered an autograph book and are said to have sometimes passed them down the Bench. In the first stanza, Woodbury admits that he is not “poet born,” yet it was also not his first venture into verse. This is one of over a dozen poems known to have been penned by Woodbury—the earliest of which he wrote at just 15 years old. Woodbury may also have been a reader of poetry because “with thoughts that breathe & words that burn” directly references the same famous line by 18th-century poet Thomas Gray.

     

    1 / 2
    An untitled two-stanza poem by Justice Levi Woodbury, dedicated to a Miss R. D. Smith, “with my kindest wishes for her happiness.”
    An untitled two-stanza poem by Justice Levi Woodbury, dedicated to a Miss R. D. Smith, “with my kindest wishes for her happiness.”
    Collection of the Supreme Court of the United States.
    Click on the arrows or dots to see the next photograph.
    2 / 2
    A transcript of Justice Levi Woodbury’s untitled poem.
    A transcript of Justice Levi Woodbury’s untitled poem. Click on the arrows or dots to see the next photograph.
    SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES 1 First Street, NE Washington, DC 20543