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By Jack Joseph Smith

"Listen Annie. We were there. There when it started. Remember the walks up on the cliffs?" "They were pretty. Bunches of wild flowers. The reading was done leaning against trees." "Now they are all smoking grass, as it is called. We called it reffer back in Pittsburgh. I don't smoke it. Do you smoke it? "A little bit." "Well, I drink," "You could say that." "But I work too, isn't THAT?" "Hum; I suppose." "Nowhere work? Right?" "I am not here for questions and answers." "It's a coffie table top Annie. What else do you do over a coffie table top?" "I came here for a meeting, nothing more." "OK." "I don't want troubble." "Who said I was going to give trouble?" "You are not stable Stravgin." "I'm drinking coffie arn't I?" "I just don't want anything to do with you, ever again!" "The child?" "You care nothing about the kids." "But don't we only have one?" "You have none as far as I am concerned."

Original Scan

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AI Interpretation

GPT

The page stages a bitter reunion with Annie in which small talk, drugs, coffee, and the child become evidence that the marriage has already collapsed.

What gives the exchange force is its brittle theatricality. Stavrogin tries wit, teasing, and need, while Annie keeps cutting through to the practical wound beneath it all, until the conversation becomes less a reconciliation than a record of estrangement.


Claude

Coffee-table dialogue between Stavrogin and Annie. She positions him as unstable and disowns their shared parenthood (you have none as far as I am concerned); he needles her with coffee-shop banter about Pittsburgh reefer. OCR-damaged but the emotional beat is estrangement meeting at a neutral table.