by Gene Fendt
“At 8-1, the Cubs are off to their best start since 1969”
–news story, April 15, 2016
They’re hanging the bunting at Wrigley
. Â Â a hundred years after the Babe;
so many have waited so long for this day
.   it’s hard to believe what we see.
My childhood knows Santo, Kessinger, Beckert and Banks,
.   the trade of Lou Brock, the umpire’s mistake,
facing Giants and Pirates and Hammering Hank,
. Â Â the line-up of Bench, Morgan, Rose and Perez,
the grace of Clemente before he was dead,
.   the stare-down of Gibson, Bob Veale and Koufax’s crank:
Lou Boudreau on radio made it appear
. Â Â as Athena to Hector, when Achilles was near.
The world is unworthy of childhood faith,
. Â Â the utter incorrigible truth of its love,
its weeping for heroes defeated by fate,
. Â Â its Aprils and Augusts, stolen bases, gold gloves.
All that is over. It’s daytime, there’s ivy,
.   it’s got God’s own green grass,
the bunting is hanging, and so soon you’ll see
. Â Â God himself in his garden, all home at last.
Gene Fendt has taught philosophy for 29 years at the University of Nebraska, but grew up in Wisconsin listening to WGN, “radio home of millions throughout mid America.” His poetry most recently has captured the Princemere Poetry Prize (2015) and won the Gemini Magazine national poetry competition.