Page 97
By Jack Joseph Smith
By Jack Joseph Smith
Original Scan
AI Interpretation
"The Business of Mr. Jim Breen" builds a sprawling praise poem around a man whose steadiness, service, and refusal of cheap illusion define his dignity.
Jim Breen is described through negations and comparisons: not sheep, not lion, not fish on a string, which makes him feel resistant to easy roles. The poem keeps tying his character to labor, taverns, contracts, food, family lineages, mills, and service, so "business" means an ethic as much as a livelihood. Its long, winding sentences finally present respect as the force that lets life move, and Breen as someone who holds to that force without turning sentimental.
'The Business of Mr. Jim Breen': long portrait of a bar-owner who is neither sheep nor lion, whose luck persists in service, whose business is famous because he can't be caught swerving.
The poem is a character sketch that refuses the easy heroic read — Breen is the businessman whose ethical position is precisely non-alignment. 'Kindness watched lost like whole metal in the mills' is the historical anchor; Breen's steadiness is what happens after the Pittsburgh mills lost their kindness-scale production. The poem lets the tavern-owner be the quiet stoic without hagiography.