Page 146

By Jack Joseph Smith

The Worst Let's gee, worse than war Getting hit over the head * by a frying pan; meanwhile, you have watched each split second on it's way toward a conclusion; spilling paint, that a get ya’ also Any kind of bad accident, that you know you had nothing to do with; saying I love you whem only one is lying; healing a dog with money, and later realizing the dog has no memory of it at all; worse than war, let's see; being insulted in public,. that will do aur"

Original Scan

Page 146

AI Interpretation

GPT

"The Worst" catalogs humiliations, accidents, false love, and failed tenderness as injuries that rival or even outstrip war.

What gives the page its sting is the refusal to rank suffering by public grandeur alone. A frying pan, spilled paint, a lying "I love you," and a dog that cannot remember being saved all become measures of how absurd and thankless pain can be. The ending lands on public insult because shame, not only violence, is one of the poem’s deepest wounds.


Claude

The Worst: worse than war, getting hit over the head with a frying pan, or saying I love you when only one is lying, or healing a dog that then has no memory of it. Being insulted in public, that will do you.