Page 131
By Jack Joseph Smith
By Jack Joseph Smith
Original Scan
AI Interpretation
The speaker faces the devil as a frightened, chalk-faced adversary and moves from bodily combat into a bewildered confession about caves, falsehood, and saying what should not have been said.
The poem keeps sliding between brawl, vision, and self-reproach, as if spiritual conflict can only be described through bruised physical terms. Coming out of the cave suggests emergence, but every emergence here is compromised by confusion and by the speaker’s own distrust of what he has named. The last lines are not a revelation but an embarrassment at having spoken at all.
Each time you go against the devil, a similar chawk smile, war begins throat to throat. I didn't think about a thing that was true and now can't understand why I mentioned it.