Untitled ("Every valley knows a shadow")

By Jack Joseph Smith

Every valley knows a shadow We will let live all the way down A desert and a father as a hitch hicker A long way away from the green gone blown Kenai and Witicha, Alberta and Sault Saint Marie We're just fellers hanging out in dealership Dreaming about an axle bolt, oh the worry, the near reservation has about the next fix We cross bridges just like sightsear's, when it is alwys a new experience No one goes down on a wooden flat anymore And guns will never be any better We are the best actors ever were Finished as fools and fine as clowns Seek not our top or bottom, we are in the middle of you A gust of wind, a place to place Lots of signiture, little grace

Original Scan

Page 24

AI Interpretation

GPT

A wide-ranging regional inventory in which geography, machinery, and masculine theater all become ways of describing insecurity.


Claude

The poem catalogs American geography as a series of insecurities — valleys with shadows, deserts with hitchhiking fathers, dealerships where men dream about axle bolts. Masculinity here is not performance but worry, and the real drama is not adventure but the anxiety of the next repair.

The place names (Kenai, Wichita, Alberta, Sault Sainte Marie) function as an incantation of distance. Each name extends the map without providing arrival, reinforcing the poem's central experience: being far from the green and getting farther.