The Old Way
By Jack Joseph Smith
By Jack Joseph Smith
Original Scan
AI Interpretation
This three-page sequence mixes Apache landscape, Geronimo memory, childhood vision, and urban afterlife into a rough meditation on what survives and what is lost.
Even with fragmentary wording, the through-line is strong: sand, cliff, lushness, concrete, youth, and city streets all belong to one argument about inheritance. The poem keeps testing whether an older frontier or spiritual intensity can still be felt inside modern life, and the answer is unstable but not empty.
Three drafts of the same poem laid out as one work. Page 15 is the seed — Geronimo, the totem pole, Apache territory, Che. Page 16 is the chant, four 'waist nothing / waist noting' verses that work less as statement than as rhythm, closing on the inherited proverb 'a penny saved is a penny earned.' Page 17 is the finished piece, where the chant is compressed and the poem finally arrives at 'I live in a city were there still / are a few stepping stones.' Read across the pagebreaks, it is a poem about how much of your childhood survives the crossing into a concrete city, and the answer — a few stones, a penny earned, a body jib 'to swirl and turn out in measure' — is small but intact.