Page 176

By Jack Joseph Smith

7 Ego . If off the end I could talk Strum with babble Less than a child : | A thought way out i There to think | All the way to the end again | Thinking Representation included; | what a perfect collection ; Be dressed to the teeth; ! after the evening, and you can stand with | a tin-eup all the way \ , across the shut out stars

Original Scan

Page 176

AI Interpretation

GPT

"Ego" presents thought at the edge of collapse, where babble, costume, and poverty all survive under a sky that has already shut the speaker out.

The voice seems to be testing what can still be said once language starts to fray back toward childhood. "Dressed to the teeth" and "tin-cup" belong to opposite worlds, so the poem keeps social performance and destitution in the same frame. Its last image is cold and theatrical, as if ego can still pose even after the cosmos has refused admission.


Claude

Ego: babble, dressed to the teeth, tin cup across the shut out stars. The staging is beggar-celestial.