Page 268
By Jack Joseph Smith
By Jack Joseph Smith
Original Scan
AI Interpretation
This rough, heavily revised draft of "My Son" praises inherited craft and grit while pushing toward a more troubled account of hurt, catastrophe, and a life shaped by unfinished adventure.
The readable typed layer begins with family trade: grandfather's garage, nuts and bolts, hands, grit, and machine work. The added lower lines darken that praise with catastrophe, hurt, and looking back, while the heavy handwritten overlay shows the poem still being actively reworked. The revision layer is documented but omitted from the body because its full wording and reading order remain unstable.
Compressed 'My Son' restatement (echo of 226): the trade tooled from Grandfather's garage, nuts and bolts, grass roots; honed since he was six, up with the grit.