Page 227

By Jack Joseph Smith

And amist mother and father catastophe At elever and twelve Im a tree house, inclave, and family shack He lived along the cliffs of the Oregon coast, where he was not after something else Now my young son sees the world, with his mind and his feet as well Rough SAINTS Through IT science,pushes and puts his art as part of the globe in need of discovery and repair Though it does make a differance when and how he was born; it is all the same for him, going to places he has never been Before The missions may be different, After YET his excitement at being

Original Scan

Page 227

AI Interpretation

GPT

Between family catastrophe, a tree house on the Oregon coast, and science as discovery and repair, the son grows into someone bent on unfamiliar ground.

Mother and father catastrophe is not background color; it is part of the terrain alongside tree house, family shack, and Oregon cliffs. The page measures the boy's rootedness against the globe, science, and work that needs repair, suggesting a mind and body moving outward from origin. The handwritten revisions around science and the Before/After/YET mission cluster intensify that motion, though the final syntax of the closing lines remains provisional.


Claude

Continues. 'Amist mother and father catastophe,' tree-house years on the Oregon coast cliffs, and now the son sees the world with mind and feet; science pushes his art 'as part of the globe / in need of discovery / and repair.'