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By Jack Joseph Smith

Is it Fear Who are these dark skinned Earl Flyn's Don't misunderstand through whatever beauty you have seen; hatred has its abstractions too We have decided not to use a blade; rather we have come to terms where just a sash will go around your neck The sands through the hour glass could help toward the end I've seen Earol Flinn fence and I have seen him pretend with a bow sword, and I have seen him at the head of five hundred riders across Films the prairie which even in fiction is very dangerous

Original Scan

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AI Interpretation

GPT

"Is it Fear" turns swashbuckling fantasy into a meditation on racialized beauty, stylized violence, and the elegant disguises hatred gives itself.

Earl Flyn's and Earol Flinn arrive as figures of cinematic bravado, but the poem strips romance away by placing strangulation and spectacle in the same frame. "Hatred has its abstractions too" is the key line, because it suggests that cruelty survives by becoming ornamental, even courtly. The handwritten Films annotation makes the ending more explicitly self-aware about spectacle, while the prairie charge remains dangerous even in fiction.


Claude

Ts it Fear asks who are these dark skinned Earl Flyn's, builds toward a neck sash rather than a blade, and ends with Earl Flinn himself at the head of five hundred riders which even in fiction is very dangerous.