Page 165

By Jack Joseph Smith

Pattie © what a banker; when John-walks in to rob the place,. the lady knows I stood up for her in: grammer school,. and behind my image partiners have . loaded up metaphor’s of thievery Sweet is different as sweet is the same Sweet can be right there, or you can have it pul you all around the world to be at least around it John's travelel’s say, Pattie has never erosséd anyone

Original Scan

Page 165

AI Interpretation

GPT

"Pattie" places a bank robbery inside a web of old loyalty, sweetness, and criminal metaphor, turning the woman at the center into a moral fixed point.

The page is fascinated by how tenderness survives inside outlaw speech. Pattie is linked to grammar school memory and to a reputation for never crossing anyone, which gives her a steadiness the men around her lack. Even the word "sweet" becomes unstable here, pulling the speaker through distance rather than offering rest.


Claude

Pattie: the banker. When John walks in to rob the place she remembers the speaker standing up for her in grammar school. Pattie has never crossed anyone.