Page 197

By Jack Joseph Smith

Nancy Ann Seductive, in the wind, had me, in that way, when back to back, defending the yearning life we knew; in one den after another Against the sex, of both kinds, of wildcats; we had a wider kind of smile, across our teeth, beyond the lip, the history of our kids, who show the beast Exquisite as time telling the surface of the sea, we slanted Heven, but never slanted hell

Original Scan

Page 197

AI Interpretation

GPT

Nancy Ann is bound to the speaker by desire, struggle, children, and a slanting life at sea that can bend heaven but never hell.

The page begins in mutual defense, with the couple back to back against a world of wildcats and divided kinds of desire. The handwritten continuation deepens that bond into something maritime and cosmological: they slant across the sea and even alter heaven's angle, but hell remains fixed. That asymmetry gives the love poem its hardness.


Claude

Nancy Ann: seductive in the wind, had me, defending the yearning life in one den after another, against the sex of both kinds of wildcats. We slanted Heaven but never slanted hell.