Untitled ("The thrill of a child stealing")

By Jack Joseph Smith

The thrill of a child stealing steaks and alcohol off the fat of the land The will of the wind without a trace Sure I can, with the hit, sure I can The Klamath River in the summer Hot and filled with old forty fours; saining stakes set rock wound for a, swing of fish, blue gill will be fine Cowboy bars and holdups and hold on too's Citys and the lose of curancy, and the wonder of a dime Nature and the other world In the eyes of the beholder Eat your heart out Sault Saint Marie We just got off the Ontario train And your women will not be left alone

Original Scan

Page 10

AI Interpretation

GPT

This piece links petty crime, frontier bravado, and cross-border movement into a restless vision of masculine hunger and regional drift.


Claude

Theft, alcohol, the Klamath River in summer, forty-fours in the water — the poem builds a catalogue of frontier appetite in which a child's petty crime and a river full of guns occupy the same moral landscape. The 'thrill' of the title is not ironic; it is the genuine excitement of a world where taking what you need is both necessary and exhilarating.

The shift from stolen steaks to the Klamath River maps a movement from domestic crime to wilderness, suggesting that the same hunger drives both — and that the landscape itself is armed.