Page 12

By Jack Joseph Smith

All the great linebackers that didn't play and became street fighters Full back Preston Mc Murry Witman's five and dime The peddler's broken window is up to question Jackie Fields, the champ, tells me as a kid not to fight with those I know I can whip; that way I will never be a bully Card players way to old to be sitting on the front lawn of Lincoln Grammer School No harm no foul Lose your football scholarship and come home and talk religion: and politics and drink twenty hours a day The Cobbler throwing the hammer through his own window and going to Inverness, California The difference between whiskey and wine and the ones who drink it A young girl is the same sunlight and the same moon lit night no matter where in the world you are Your childhood immagination is sometimes better the worse off you are Sticking up for Billy Anderson on Mc Murry's front lawn. An Epiphany

Original Scan

Page 12

AI Interpretation

GPT

The page gathers Pittsburgh names, fighters, schools, drinkers, and childhood incidents into a rough civic credo.

What gives the page force is its refusal to separate moral lesson from neighborhood memory. Football, bullying, scholarship, whiskey, sunlight, and epiphany all belong to the same local education, so the city itself becomes a shaping intelligence.


Claude

A dense catalogue page of neighborhood aphorisms: linebackers who never played, Jackie Fields teaching the kid not to fight friends, the cobbler throwing his hammer through his own window, the lost football scholarship and twenty hours of religion and whiskey.