Patience Worth

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Patience Worth was the pseudonym used by Pearl Lenore Curran (February 15 1883 - 1937) who was the author of several novels, poetry and prose which she claimed was delivered to her through channelling a spirit.

File:Pearlcurran.jpg
Pearl Curran.

Curran was born Pearl Lenore Pollard in Mound City, Illinois. The family moved to Texas when she was eight months old and she started school when she was six. She was an average but disinterested student, eventually dropping out in her first high school year, later stating she had a nervous break down due to the strenuous academics. She later returned to classes, at St. Ignatius Catholic school.

Curran was a normal girl, and was sensitive about her looks, considering herself to be ugly. She admitted to having little imagination, and few ambitions, except to be an actress. She had a short attention span, and read very little during her formative years.

Her family moved to St Louis when she was 14. She made a last attempt at attending school but was discouraged when placed in a lower grade based on her academic skills. However she took music lessons and training in piano and voice and aspired to be a prima-donna. About that time the family moved again, to Palmer, Missouri. As Curran's musical talents blossomed, she was sent to Kanakee, Illinois for voice training, before moving to Chicago for tuition from J.C Cooper. She worked at the Mckinley Music Company addressing envelopes for $6 a week, then the Thompson Music Company selling music. From the age of 18 to 24 she worked at assorted jobs in Chicago during winter months, and during the summer she taught music at home in Missouri.

Marriage

Pearl married John Howard Curran when she was 24. Though by no means wealthy, they lived a leisurely lifestyle which gave her free time for movie going or playing cards with her husband or neighbors. The Currans did not own books, were not well educated or well travelled, and the first seven years of their middle class marriage were uneventful.

On July 18, 1913, a neighbour showed Curran a Ouija board and convinced her to place her hands on it despite believing they were silly, boring and pointless. The Ouija board spelled out gibberish but Curran later claimed she slowly began to get a message - "Many moons ago I lived. Again I come. Patience Worth my name If thou shalt live, so shall I".

Curran had never been interested in the occult, but when prompted by her friend to ask the entity questions, said she was surprised when her questions began to get intelligent answers, and she wondered if the communications were merely coincidental.

Curran reputedly researched the name Patience Worth and found a woman of that name had lived in Dorsetshire, England in either 1649 or 1694. Later, Curran claimed that Patience told her through the Ouija board that she had moved from England and was murdered by Indians. "From England across the sea. Could I but hold your ear for the lessons I could teach!"

File:Pearlcurran2.jpg
Pearl Curran.

In 1916, in a book with a foreword written by Caspar Yost, editor of the St. Louis Globe-Democrat, Henry Holt and Company publicized Curran's claims that she had contacted the long dead Patience Worth.

Curran went on to churn out novels (The Sorry Tale, a Book of the Christ), short stories, and much tepid poetry, supposedly composed by Patience Worth who communicated them through the Ouija board messages to Curran.

The Patience Worth affair coincided with a revival of spiritualism in the US and Britain, capturing the interest of a population wanting to believe that a middle aged housewife could talk to a long dead Puritan woman. The skeptics had a field day, particularly when they noted that Patience was somehow able to write a novel about the Victorian age, which came some 200 years after she had lived.

Many people said that because of her poor education, Curran herself could not be composing the works. The writer of a book entitled The Mystery of Patience Worth claimed that the language used in the Patience Worth historical novels was 90 percent Anglo-Saxon and 10 percent old French. No words were is use later than the 17th century. The author who wrote this was Caspar Yost, the same man who was first to publicly introduce Curran as a mystic.

Curran and Patience had something of a falling out as the years went on, and after 1922, Patience started talking less and less, and then making sarcastic comments about the intelligence of her host. Communication had pretty much ceased by the time of Pearl Curran's death. By then, public interest in Patience Worth had faded into near obscurity.

The story and writings of Pearl Curran/Patience Worth are little known outside of occult circles today. Most of the writing is out of print, except for a few print-on-demand publishers who specialize in public ___domain works. There is a book called Singer in the Shadows written in the 70s about the affair, and reprinted by Back-In-Print publishers that looks at Patience Worth uncritically.