Untitled ("I am not alound to walk")

By Jack Joseph Smith

I am not alound to walk to where the end was ment to be Hell is not inbetween like a song Now it is on purpose And he gets it while he is in it

Original Scan

Page 18

AI Interpretation

GPT

A compressed poem of prohibition and fate, where hell feels less like metaphor than an arrangement deliberately imposed.


Claude

The misspelling 'alound' gives prohibition a sound — it echoes. The poem compresses fate into a single constraint: not being permitted to walk. Hell is not afterlife but the present condition of immobility imposed by unnamed forces.

A poem about being forbidden to move has itself barely moved beyond its first line, enacting the prohibition it describes.