Page 73

By Jack Joseph Smith

Diana Getting to think my know A sin Ever seen anything better; around the world, no, I saw her across and back; beautiful is fun, startling, and put you back; respectful Was it the vision I had Pascal; Am I a part of the discovery of glass,, where beauty is weak and tall and direct all at once,. and would I give it up,, the thought about it Children,, let us see labor money; more than mine, devine as a word never used, more than mine,, mussel soup,, and her way of going back with the spoom,, while all family is the cross between delicate and tough,, and there is a clause in the wide book of poetry, that says killing is for others,. and that includes yourself

Original Scan

Page 73

AI Interpretation

GPT

Diana arrives as a vision of beauty so startling and direct that labor, family, poetry, and even self-destruction have to be judged against her presence.

The poem keeps asking whether beauty is discovery or illusion, but it never lets itself retreat from the force of what it has seen. The handwritten annotation and the family insertion make the page feel actively revised around thought and kinship. Mussel soup, children, labor, and the wide book of poetry bring the vision down into a lived world rather than leaving it abstract, and the final moral turn is severe: killing belongs to others, and that prohibition includes the self.


Claude

Diana: beautiful, startling, respectful. References Pascal and a clause in the wide book of poetry that killing is for others, and that includes yourself.