Page 66
By Jack Joseph Smith
By Jack Joseph Smith
Original Scan
AI Interpretation
Rain on a Budweiser and soft suburban lawns expose a landscape built over older labor, where present comfort rests on transferred coal-mining hardship.
The mood is misty, but the class memory is exact. The leaded window and elite homes are not innocent scenery; they sit on a history of extraction passed from a dreaded worker's time into the property of masters' sons. The poem compresses regional history into one wet, slightly drunken moment of recognition.
Mt. Lebanon rainy Budweiser vignette: lawns of coal-mine-transferred stone homes where elite ivy has grown over labor history.
The poem sits inside a leaded window and notices that the softness it sees is the end-state of prior extraction. 'Dreaded man's time' becoming 'master's sons' homes' is the page's class compression — three generations in one breath. The drink and the weather give the observation permission to happen.