Page 93
By Jack Joseph Smith
By Jack Joseph Smith
Original Scan
AI Interpretation
"Put Your Money in Nietzsche" turns a scorched, half-mocked book into an argument for reading past slogans and finding a harsher, freer kind of life in it.
The poem begins in comic ruin, with whiskey, candle wax, firewood, and a damaged copy of "Beyond Good And Evil," so philosophy enters through poverty and clutter rather than reverence. The speaker admits hearing "bad stuff" about Nietzsche and then discovering, through actual reading, that the easy accusation misses the point. What remains is a rough faith in a vibration of life that cannot be reduced to labels or stolen by "pickers."
'Put Your Money In Nietzsche': candlelit night in the hills, wax eats the name, schoolboys and potato shacks, Hillbilly Heaven making a mess of Beyond Good And Evil.
The poem treats reading Nietzsche as a rural practical education — you save two weeks' pay and shelve it between the pages. The line 'Nietzsche had lost his own name on purpose' is the page's take; the speaker is arguing for a vibration under the reputation rather than defending the reputation. Hillbilly Heaven is not mocking; it's the page's actual home ground.