Page 75

By Jack Joseph Smith

Diana I have never seen anything better, not around the world, but across it and back; peautiful women,. tall and so direct with her eyes; I would give it up, I thought abot it. children, let us see back without everr labor money, so pretty,, and no money could make her more than mine; the taste of devine, the spin way off the mountain, seeing the likes of her taking the jib,, stars in your eyes when she talks, southerrr cross and Nortj star, which we should do enough of, or which way should we go,, running out of hell can make a good soul tired, there again going from top to bottom,, where is it that we raise the hand,, when in all of nature, and foolishish of those who have , not seer us say it is enough,, and I looked up to her in a circle bar and knew that this is the best looking women I have ever seene

Original Scan

Page 75

AI Interpretation

GPT

Diana becomes the most overwhelming beauty the speaker has known, a woman seen across the world and back whose presence exhausts money, direction, hell, and even the language of enough.

This is the most lavish of the Diana poems, letting admiration spill into stars, mountains, bars, and navigation by the Southern Cross and North Star. The speaker wants possession and surrender at the same time, which is why the poem keeps swerving between devotion and fatigue. Looking up to her in the circle bar gives the ending a specific human setting that makes the praise feel earned rather than ornamental.


Claude

Diana third pass, book-style: tallness and direct eyes, southern cross and North star, ends in a circle bar knowing she is the best looking woman I have ever seen.