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By Jack Joseph Smith
By Jack Joseph Smith
Original Scan
AI Interpretation
"Stare in the night; glance in the day" ties ancestry, railroad history, biblical violence, chance, and bodily will into a vision the speaker both withholds and swears he truly saw.
Cherokee and railroad are not just identities here but pressures that knot the soul through movement, dispossession, and inheritance. Cain and Abraham widen that pressure into scriptural scale, making submission feel ancient and unresolved. The refusal to describe the vision fully only intensifies its force, because the speaker wants certainty without surrendering the thing seen to easy explanation.
Stare in the night; glanee in the day: the Cherokee and railroad thesis, the sears of Caim (sic) submitted but not blessed, an REM. line about those who deny the laws of chance.