Page 46
By Jack Joseph Smith
By Jack Joseph Smith
Original Scan
AI Interpretation
Riverbed smiles, falling in love, war songs, West Virginia sinking, and rifles on both sides collide in a speech about knowing too well where these stories end.
The poem moves by jagged leaps, but its emotional logic is clear: romance, violence, and regional memory are inseparable. It mocks the idea that war testimony teaches anything new, since the songs of native sons already carry that knowledge. Preserved source spellings keep the voice rough and immediate, while the last question about where to look while exchanging glances leaves the speaker trapped between intimacy and armed suspicion.
A native sons stanza where the dead smile in the riverbed. Shut up and sink, try to get that reed in your mouth, rifels on two sides.