Page 36
By Jack Joseph Smith
By Jack Joseph Smith
Original Scan
AI Interpretation
A remembered Pittsburgh bar scene turns literary ambition into something grimy, theatrical, and helpless beside another person's visible ruin.
The speaker carefully corrects the street name and maps the tunnel, mirrors, dirt, tile, jukebox shoes, and torn clothing, as if exact memory might justify what happened there. Reading William Saroyan in that room feels half earnest and half absurd, especially against the woman's drunkenness and the bar's stale, mirrored ugliness. The quoted line about killing lands like a dangerous collision between art, youth, and misery.
Start of 'Poverty Program Intrusion': Pittsburgh bar, William Saroyan as the thing being preached, a drunk woman held in terrible detail.
The page is a portrait held together by physical specifics — black-on-black tables, 1930 squared tile, a gray spider shawl. The preacher-of-Saroyan framing makes the page both tribute and self-indictment; the speaker knows evangelizing fiction into a tavern is absurd. The poem refuses to flatten the woman it describes, which is what keeps it on this side of condescension.