Sunday, June 26, 2011

I was trying to describe you to someone...


"I was trying to describe you to someone the other day. You don't look like any other girl I've ever seen before. I couldn't say: 'Well she looks like Jane Fonda except that she's got red hair and her mouth is different and of course she's not a movie star.'

I couldn't say that because you don't look like Jane Fonda at all.

I finally ended up describing you as a movie I saw when I was a child in Tacoma, Washington. I guess I saw it in 1941 or '42: somewhere in there. I think I was seven or eight or six. It was a movie about rural electrification and a perfect 1930s New Deal morality kind of movie to show kids.

The movie was about farmers living in the country without electricity. They had to use lanterns to see by night, for sewing and reading, and they didn't have any appliances...and couldn't listen to the radio.

Then they built a dam with big electric generators and they put poles across the countryside and strung wire over fields and pastures. There was an incredible heroic dimension that came from the simple putting up of poles for the wires to travel along....Then the movie showed Electricity like a young Greek god coming to the farmer to take away forever the dark ways of his life.

Suddenly, religiously, with the throwing of a switch the farmer had electric lights to see by when he milked his cows in the early black winter mornings. The farmers family got to listen to the radio and have a toaster and lots of bright lights to sew dresses and read newspapers by.

It was a really fantastic movie and excited me like listening to 'The Star Spangled Banner' or seeing photographs of President Roosevelt or listening to him on the radio.

I wanted electricity to go everywhere in the world. I wanted all the farmers in the world to be able to listen to President Roosevelt on the radio.

That's how you look to me.


-Richard Brautigan's Revenge of the Lawn


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