Page 34
By Jack Joseph Smith
By Jack Joseph Smith
Original Scan
AI Interpretation
Belief gives way to evil, disease, and cynicism, yet the mind still keeps generating seductive visions of sweetness and transcendence.
Once the dream leaves, the poem describes a world where grace has gone secret and survival depends on moving within a hidden inner dignity. Images of whirlpool, drowning, roses under glass, and breathing downward make faith feel less like uplift than a strange ability to live inside collapse. The ending refuses a clean doctrine, reducing revelation to clam or god, and turns disappearance itself into the final meaning.
'Death of the Believer': dream departs, evil hardens at the bone, grace becomes the ability to breathe in a whirlpool.
The poem defines faith by subtraction — it names what remains once the dream is gone. 'The clandestine grace of cynicism' is the most honest line on the page; it won't pretend cynicism is grace-free. The ending — 'Be it as Clam or god / That mean your gone' — refuses the choice between religious and mineral terms for the same vanishing.