In The Track Of Inflation Frames

By Jack Joseph Smith

Just new wind when the last sparrow flew across the snow Still to much time till spring with the defusion of a sun rendered unable to sink or lift winter's weight The flat gray of the sky has immagination end ‘with paved ‘infinityy which=has each suburban home identify its sleep walker as deceased You can count the trees as stones though shale and root must have some breath Down at the eight foot eartheee swimming pool shapes fight for the concrete split into cracks While covered by. canvess blown into mounds; plastic slides to sumer chlorine have had their holding tin twisted by cold, when what is hollow will whine Brittle wood fences with white paint for sap stay streight at the poles; but begin to be bent in their slate What had been fantisied through screens is now in front of squared plexaglass, and the dream of the plot being7a ranch brings shutters of paranoic -superstition At dusk only hill house property is lit, and for the slope people, the T, Vs antennas haven't moved for minutes” There are no sleds, no skis The mortgage children this evening Seem to have taken their energy Without call or questior to their caves a 9

Original Scan

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AI Interpretation

GPT

A winter suburban landscape where sparrows, frozen pools, bent fences, and silent television antennas render economic pressure as a physical flattening of imagination, ending with mortgage children retreating to their caves.


Claude

Inflation is not an abstraction here but a weather system — the poem renders it as gray sky, cracked concrete, twisted plastic, and children who have taken their energy 'without call or question / to their caves.' The suburban dream of the ranch-style plot curdles into paranoid superstition, and the TV antennas that 'haven't moved for minutes' become monuments to a culture that has stopped receiving signals.