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By Jack Joseph Smith

Diana Quiting drinking is not a sim I did it across the world and back I saw her as if she were fun Startling, respeqtful, and just as tall as I; and it was not the glass of Pascal,, she was just raw discovery Where beauty is slim and weak,, direct all at once,, the mussel soup you would give it up for; childrem and labor,. we use devihe in sparing ways, we of course, the great poet, so there is Silence as well as explosive things, when I saw Diana I said I wil skim another rock across the lake,, and I will dive into the one ocearr and the one sea, that I know pretty well

Original Scan

Page 74

AI Interpretation

GPT

This version of "Diana" ties sobriety, global travel, raw discovery, and explosive silence together in a vow to keep moving through water and distance after seeing her.

The opening line rejects guilt and clears space for a different kind of reverence. Diana is not polished or symbolic here; she is encountered as fact, a direct beauty that makes the speaker want to skim rocks and dive back into known waters. Silence matters as much as the explosive things, which gives the poem a steadier and more lived devotion.


Claude

Diana second pass: Quiting drinking is not a sin. She was raw discovery, not the glass of Pascal. Closes with diving into the one ocean and the one sea I know pretty well.