Page 17
By Jack Joseph Smith
By Jack Joseph Smith
Original Scan
AI Interpretation
Solitude is shown as a fierce inner editor that burns away sentimental clutter and preserves only the most painful truths.
The figure of memory sorting through accumulated waste makes emotional life feel like a pile of stored material that must be judged. Nostalgia is dimming and disposable, while bitterness is purified, magnified, and eternalized, which gives pain a strange authority. The result is austere rather than healing: solitude does not comfort but refines what hurts most.
A woman's memory edited by solitude: the soft material burned, the bitter material kept and magnified.
The poem trusts memory to be a pruner, not a preserver, which reverses the usual elegy. 'Burned the dimming piles of nostalgic waste' is the most morally unsentimental thing on the page. The result — bitterness purified and 'eternalized' — sounds almost religious, and the poem won't flinch from that claim.