Page 331
By Jack Joseph Smith
By Jack Joseph Smith
Original Scan
AI Interpretation
Crawling away and buying replacement guns down the road turns weapons into disposable objects, so terror cannot masquerade as the soul that must be saved.
The argument depends on contempt for the gun's supposed sacredness. A weapon can be left in the dirt, replaced down the road, and separated from the body without damaging the soul. By calling guns something other than paintings, the poem also refuses to aestheticize them; they are tools, and violence fails precisely because it pretends to be essence.
Reprise of the 'On both sides / Talking to terror' passage from 258; guns not soul, crawl away and leave them behind, guns are not paintings, 'we can get them again right down the road.' Same refrain as a standalone page.