Page 28

By Jack Joseph Smith

The self before my eyes, was gone, the electric beneath stopped, the girth of the unknown Left, he came down to A cocky swink, I'd never love an image again, I now knew the eternal differance the long line of respect will make or brake in the heart of things, that are only mortal.

Original Scan

Page 28

AI Interpretation

GPT

The speaker watches an image collapse and turns that moment into a reflection on respect, illusion, and mortality.

Even in partial form, the page is coherent. Something grand or idealized vanishes, and the speaker responds not just with disappointment but with a harder understanding of `differance` and the fragile ethics that govern human life. The closing line brings the whole page back to limits: all these dramas happen inside things that are `only mortal.`


Claude

The self before the eyes is gone, the `electric beneath stopped`, the figure is reduced to `A cocky swink`. The speaker declares he will never again love an image — a turning point in the book's mirror-gazing material.