Read Fragments: Poems, Intimate Notes, Letters Online
Authors: Marilyn Monroe
Oh damn I wish that I were
dead—absolutely nonexistent—
gone away from here—from
everywhere but how would Ido it
There is always bridges—the Brooklyn
bridge—no not the Brooklyn Bridge
becauseBut I love that bridge (everything is beautiful from there
and the air is so clean) walking it seems
peacefulthereeven with all those
cars going crazy underneath. So
it would have to be some other bridge
an ugly one and with no view—except
Iparticularlylike in particular all bridges—there’s some
thing about them and besidestheseI’ve
never seen an ugly bridge
Stones on the walk
every color there is
I stare down at you
likethosethe a horizon—
the space / the air is between us beckoning
and I am many storiesbesidesup
my feetarefrightened
from myas I graspfortowards you
Only parts of us will ever
touchonlyparts of others—
one’s own truth is just
that really—
one’s
own truth.
We can only share the
part that
isunderstood bywithin another’s knowing acceptableto
the other—thereforeso one
is for most part
alone
.
As it is meant to be in evidently in nature—at bestthoughperhaps it could make
our understanding seek
another’s loneliness out.
I can’t really stand Human
Beings sometimes—I know
they all have their problems
as I have mine—but I’m really too tired for it. Trying to understand,
making allowances, seeing certain things
that just weary me.
On Hospital gowns
My bare
(darrie) derrière
is out the air
in the air
when I’m not aware
aware
several
Handel Concertos
Vivaldi Concertos
Benny Goodman
My (pair)
Beethoven
Last 6—quartets
Ravel
—the Waltz
Bartok—quartets of his
continued on other side
of list of records
Marilyn in the garden of Hotel Bel-Air, Los Angeles, 1952 Marilyn reading Joyce’s
Ulysses
, Long Island, summer of 1955
“RECORD” BLACK NOTEBOOK
AROUND 1951
As she often did, Marilyn filled only a few pages of this notebook, about twelve out of the hundred and fifty it contains and at obviously distinct periods. The first pages open with a heartfelt “Alone!!!” followed by reflections on fear and feelings that can’t be put into words; these were probably jotted down in response to acting classes, which may have been those given by Michael Chekhov that she started attending in September 1951. On page 135 of the notebook, there is a poignant text about the panicky fear that sometimes overtook her when she was about to shoot a scene because of her dread of disappointing; her deep-seated sense that, despite the good work she had done, the bad outweighed it, sapping her confidence. Here the language is very strong: “depressed mad.”
On page 146, she jotted down in pencil one of the few lines she delivered in
Love Nest
(1951), a film by Joseph M. Newman, in the supporting but nonetheless crucial role of Roberta Stevens, who was the former wartime (girl?)friend of the hero, Jim Scott. The notes on pages 148 and 149 of the notebook indicate diligent reading on the Florentine Renaissance, unless they are class notes from courses she attended at UCLA in the fall of 1950, after she had already begun acting in films. However, this school-like exercise is surrounded by an older story that most likely preceded her star status, as she writes of traveling in a crowded bus. Could this have been the same bus in which she met sixty likable Italian sailors, then a headily perfumed Filipino boy, ending up, half-crushed by a sleeping five-year-old almost slipping from his young mother’s arms, in the middle of sailors far too young to feel sad?