The Shrill

By Jack Joseph Smith

You hear the whistle blow at a traffic light, and that is nice You hear the shrill in a timber mill, big band sawd up from the retorts and their electric steam You hear it mostly at seven all along the midwestern river towns that used to make steel, yet can't stop blowing their beginnings But when you hear it from a friend That is when the damage to the ear Is more than being tested

Original Scan

Page 29

AI Interpretation

GPT

The poem begins in industrial noise and ends by locating the deepest damage in a friend's voice rather than in machinery.

Its central move is precise: whistles, mills, retorts, steam, and steel all build a world where harsh sound is ordinary, but the real wound arrives when the same shrillness comes through human closeness. That shift from factory sound to personal hurt gives the poem its force.


Claude

A geography lesson delivered as sound — traffic light, timber mill, midwestern river town at seven, steel towns 'that used to make / steel, yet can't stop blowing / their beginnings.' That phrase is the heart of the poem: Pittsburgh and Youngstown keep sounding the whistle long after the mills are gone. Then the turn: 'But when you hear it / from a friend' the same shrill is no longer nostalgia but injury. The poem teaches the reader to hear industrial noise as benign only by contrast with what a human voice can do.