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16 May 2011

Radium Girls by Eleanor Swanson / Now, even our crumbling bones / will glow forever in the black earth

by Eleanor Swanson

We sat at long tables side by side in a big
dusty room where we laughed and carried
on until they told us to pipe down and paint.
The running joke was how we glowed,
the handkerchiefs we sneezed into lighting
up our purses when we opened them at night,
our lips and nails, painted for our boyfriends
as a lark, simmering white as ash in a dark room.
"Would you die for science?" the reporter asked us,
Edna and me, the main ones in the papers.
Science? We mixed up glue, water and radium
powder into a glowing greenish white paint
and painted watch dials with a little
brush, one number after another, taking
one dial after another, all day long,
from the racks sitting next to our chairs.
After a few strokes, the brush lost its shape,
and our bosses told us to point it with
our lips. Was that science?
I quit the watch factory to work in a bank
and thought I'd gotten class, more money,
a better life, until I lost a tooth in back
and two in front and my jaw filled up with sores.
We sued: Edna, Katherine, Quinta, Larice and me,
but when we got to court, not one of us
could raise our arms to take the oath.
My teeth were gone by then. "Pretty Grace
Fryer," they called me in the papers.
All of us were dying.
We heard the scientist in France, Marie
Curie, could not believe "the manner
in which we worked" and how we tasted
that pretty paint a hundred times a day.
Now, even our crumbling bones
will glow forever in the black earth.




Copyright © 2002 by Eleanor Swanson

9 comments:

abbas said...

http://xkcd.com/896/

Vleeptron Dude said...

Another of the stature of those women scientists was Rosalind Franklin, who spent years painstakingly taking x-ray crystallography images of DNA. Her images were the central clue that led Watson, Crick and Wilkins to guess the 3D molecular structure of DNA, and win the Nobel Prize.

In his memoir "The Double Helix," Watson was particularly dismissive and abusive of Franklin, and the other two winners took pains to distance themselves from Watson's misogynistic account. I think both of them publicly said Franklin deserved to have shared the prize. The prize was awarded in 1962, but Franklin died of cancer in 1958. Above and beyond her work on DNA, she is credited with developing the entire science of x-ray crystallography.

============

In 1962 James Watson (b. 1928), Francis Crick (1916–2004), and Maurice Wilkins (1916–2004) jointly received the Nobel Prize in physiology or medicine for their 1953 determination of the structure of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA). Because the Nobel Prize can be awarded only to the living, Wilkins’s colleague Rosalind Franklin (1920–1958), who died of cancer at the age of 37, could not be honored.

All the other women scientists mentioned in the comic strip -- well, they're fascinating, and well worth reading about.

Eleanor Swanson said...

Thank you for posting "Radium Girls."

www.eleanorswanson.com

Vleeptron Dude said...

Thank you for writing it. The Radium Girls are long dead, but their humanity lives on through you.

I hope I did typographical justice to the poem. Blogs are pretty thuggish things typographically.

Everybody knows a tiny urban legend about how the watch painter women used to lick the brushes to make a fine point. But the actual full history of the Radium Girls, and the trial -- these are largely unknown.

What drew you to this story and inspired you to write this poem?

Eleanor said...

The lineation is fine. I appreciate your question. Since the book is about Marie Curie and the discovery of radium, I relied heavily on biographical material about her. Curie did say she could not believe "the manner in which they worked," and when I did further research on them, neither could I. That was the impetus for the poem. I am also interested in writing about Rosalind Franklin.

Vleeptron Dude said...

Rosalind Franklin's early death made her ineligible to share the Nobel Prize, but in recent years all three of the laureates (Watson the most belatedly and grudgingly) have expressed their conviction that she deserved the prize.

She did graduate work in Paris -- the Pasteur Institute, I guess -- and was lifelong smitten with Parisienne notions of coiture and fashion. I don't mean to suggest that France is some sort of gender Utopia, but she was accepted as a colleague much more cordially in Paris than the nasty cold shower she encountered when she came back to London to work on DNA X-ray crystallography.

Good luck with the Franklin book! Oh and look, I filched your poem without asking -- I owe you a pizza. Let me know if you're ever sliding by my neighborhood -- Smith College, Mount Holyoke, Amherst, etc.

(It doesn't HAVE to be pizza, but whatever you want, it's on me.)

Eleanor said...

Thanks again. Pizza, beer, beer and pizza? If you're ever in the Denver/Boulder area, I'll take you up on that offer.

Vleeptron Dude said...

Don't tempt me to go to Boulder, 42 years after my last visit I'm still gobsmacked by how gorgeous Boulder is.

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