this was frances farmer.
i was reminded of her this evening by wikipedia because of her omittance from something else, which got me so rankled i edited an article for the first time ever.
gave me a funny feeling, like what if someone reads my words? haha.
i don't ever feel that way about this...
lol.
and then in my meanderings through the googleverse i discovered this essay, which i had never seen.
she wrote this when she was sixteen or seventeen. it won an award and caused a ruckus. it makes everything that happened later make much more sense. to me anyway.
you can take from it what you will.
(look at this site for a bit more...)
i couldn't write anywhere near as well at the age of seventeen...
the things i wrote were poems about chickens and stupid postcards from a faerie called rosemary to a rotten boyfriend i was missing...
"God Dies."
No one ever came to me and said, "You're a fool. There isn't such a thing as God. Somebody's been stuffing you." It wasn't a murder. I think God just died of old age. And when I realized that he wasn't any more, it didn't shock me. It seemed natural and right.
Maybe it was because I was never properly impressed with a religion. I went to Sunday school and liked the stories about Christ and the Christmas star. They were beautiful. They made you warm and happy to think about. But I didn't believe them. The Sunday School teacher talked too much in the way our grade school teacher used to when she told us about George Washington. Pleasant, pretty stories, but not true.
Religion was too vague. God was different. He was something real, something I could feel. But there were only certain times when I could feel it. I used to lie between cool, clean sheets at night after I'd had a bath, after I had washed my hair and scrubbed my knuckles and finger nails and teeth. Then I could lie quite still in the dark with my face to the window with the trees in it, and talk to God. "I am clean, now. I've never been as clean. I'll never be cleaner." And somehow, it was God. I wasn't sure that it was … just something cool and dark and clean.
That wasn't religion, though. There was too much of the physical about it. I couldn't get that same feeling during the day, with my hands in dirty dish water and the hard sun showing up the dirtiness on the roof-tops. And after a time, even at night, the feeling of God didn't last. I began to wonder what the minister meant when he said, "God, the father, sees even the smallest sparrow fall. He watches over all his children." That jumbled it all up for me. But I was sure of one thing. If God were a father, with children, that cleanliness I had been feeling wasn't God. So at night, when I went to bed, I would think, "I am clean. I am sleepy." And then I went to sleep. It didn't keep me from enjoying the cleanness any less. I just knew that God wasn't there. He was a man on a throne in Heaven, so he was easy to forget.
Sometimes I found he was useful to remember; especially when I lost things that were important. After slamming through the house, panicky and breathless from searching, I could stop in the middle of a room and shut my eyes. "Please God, let me find my red hat with the blue trimmings." It usually worked. God became a super-father that couldn't spank me. But if I wanted a thing badly enough, he arranged it.
That satisfied me until I began to figure that if God loved all his children equally, why did he bother about my red hat and let other people lose their fathers and mothers for always? I began to see that he didn't have much to do about hats, people dying or anything. They happened whether he wanted them to or not, and he stayed in heaven and pretended not to notice. I wondered a little why God was such a useless thing. It seemed a waste of time to have him. After that he became less and less, until he was…nothingness.
I felt rather proud to think that I had found the truth myself, without help from any one. It puzzled me that other people hadn't found out, too. God was gone. We were younger. We had reached past him. Why couldn’t they see it? It still puzzles me.
Frances Farmer, 1931.
frances farmer, with the little ff's and no god to lie with in clean sheets, dies at fifty seven.
esophageal cancer.
it was a little bigger than a hat
but i wonder if she asked.
It's pretty crazy the different slants on her in Wikipedia vs the history essays you linked to. I wonder why she was vilified so? Her mum sounded schizophrenic herself....
ReplyDeleteNice to see you post again is this an annual thing now?
Xxxx
Har har tres droll funny funny.
ReplyDeletei'm not sure yet...
i guess you'll have to wait and see.
:p
i think the biggest issue about ff is the fact everyone watched that stupid sensationalised film and thinks she was lobotomised. she refused to play the game properly is why she had such a rough deal. it was a different time. her worst transgression was that she was a stinkin' alcoholic.