Page 354

By Jack Joseph Smith

The Godd Bus They are black, tall and tough Skinny like work, traveling And I am on the million dollor bus, pocket money; yes sir, 1811 go to the back if you like, sofistacked, somehow you find you can't be in a better place When do you say leave me alone in the universe If you want it, top of the line then isn't your step strong as you can get The mention of loss should not be even though the old can't help it

Original Scan

Page 354

AI Interpretation

GPT

Riding the million-dollar bus among black, tall, work-thin travelers turns luxury, pocket money, and loss into a hard question about strength and being left alone in the universe.

The bus is comic and class-conscious at once, with "million dollar" sitting beside pocket money and the order to go to the back. The surrounding figures are drawn through labor and toughness, so comfort never quite becomes ease. Asking when to say "leave me alone in the universe" makes privilege feel isolating, while the refusal of loss sounds like bravado the old can no longer maintain.


Claude

'The Good Bus': black, tall and tough riders, skinny like work, traveling; speaker on the million-dollar bus will sit in the back — sophisticated somehow, can't be in a better place. 'When do you say leave me alone in the universe?' The old can't help mentioning loss.