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By Jack Joseph Smith

A Girl Named Sue Lots of work, being literature for a thousand years, and you can't say genius; cause literature is all about discovering yourself The apstraction however as in, it takes one to know one Cause if you can see once With a little help, one may see twice So through the heaps of ink She goes into the refined and \ hard dirt of discovering things ay) And even though light, is before life It does not mean, that they are not the same to her

Original Scan

Page 96

AI Interpretation

GPT

"A Girl Named Sue" refuses the language of genius and instead treats literature as the labor of seeing oneself twice through ink, dirt, and discovery.

The poem wants literature grounded in recognition rather than prestige. "It takes one to know one" becomes its method, suggesting that reading and writing deepen vision by repetition rather than revelation alone. Sue moves through heaps of ink into hard dirt, which makes discovery feel bodily and exact rather than airy.


Claude

A Girl Named Sue: literature is all about discovering yourself. It takes one to know one, and through the heaps of ink she goes into the refined and hard dirt of discovering things.