Baseball’s a Thing of the Heart

by Bill McCurdy

The gossamer wings of baseball soul
Float gently in the breeze,
Soaring high, from here to the sky,
On the winds of thoughts that please.

We grew up reflecting, wistfully back,
To moments measurable in time,
From Big Six Christy to Babe Ruth’s 60,
Each memory soared sublime.

Then came the voice of Barber
To mind sketch on our brains
The frames of sculpted sentiment,
As “the catbird seat” explains.

We bought the face of heroes
On colored baseball cards
To float in what we could not see,
In the words of the radio bards.

We took these winds and ran with them
On vacant lots and streets.
Our bodies hugged the earth’s sweet crust,
But our spirits soared in sheets.

In sheets of high plane color
Filled in by all who soared,
Our souls reached out and found our wings,
Life’s breath was not ignored.

And now when things like drugs and greed
Hi-tech us from all corners,
Attacking all the sweet spots,
Sometimes I fear we’re goners.

Gone from the floating hope
For a better world above
That we once found with baseball,
Bare feet – and a ragged glove.

So fight for all worth keeping.
Baseball gave us our start,
There needs be no loss-weeping,
For our game’s a thing of the heart.

 

Bill McCurdy writes about baseball, with a particular focus on the great state of Texas, at The Pecan Park Eagle.

The Grass Problem Among Today’s Youth

by James Finn Garner

Wrigley is now “Fillmore Midwest”
As Docker-clad Boomers shake ass.
Why not? It’s not like the Cubs of today
Play any worse on hay than on grass.

Check out this photo at IvyEnvy.com to see what a weekend of Roger Waters and Kenny Chesney concerts did to the playing field at the Friendly Confines.

Fenway Park at Season’s End: Wally the Green Monster

by Rich Bowering

October.  Wally lights a cigarette,
Takes a long drag, stares at the glowing tip.
Sits somewhere in Section 42.  It’s quiet.

He can still hear his mother’s shrill yap:
Don’t have babies with people.
But he did, and that night of unprotected sex

Produced little Jimmy, with greenish skin, who
Hangs his big square head as he walks down the hallway at school,
Half-boy half-mascot.  The shotgun marriage was over

In six months – a freak for mascots, she left Wally for
Dave, the Self-Denying Fish.  Finally settled for (of course)
The Fightin’ Mule, encountered outside a porn trade show.

Jimmy doesn’t want to learn the trade.
But what else will he do? Same attitude as Lobster-Boy’s kid.
Flicking his Lucky Strike, Wally swallows the last of his
Jack Daniels and, groping down the concourse to piss,

Stops to hose down a wall.  No matter.
Minutes later he stumbles across center field, and words bear down
On him like a necklace of tires: Divorced. Absent father. Clown.

Wally knows that mascots are really just rowdy tourists
In the human world, covered with the foreign dust of ball fields:
Green and fuzzy! Spouting macabre caricatures of human heads,
And grotesque limbs! Flashing huge animal claws and teeth!

Looking up at the scoreboard before entering the secret door
And going to bed for the winter, he whips a crowd of pigeons
Into a great frenzy.  One day his son will look in the mirror and see

Behind his own green head the shadows of a thousand human faces
Waiting for his cue.  He will hear in that moment the roar that signifies
Both icon life and icon death.

 

Rich Bowering is the author of Big Fire at Spahn Ranch.

Team Dog

By Barbara Gregorich

Jack and Larry leave Canada
for Cleveland, where Larry inhales
the scent of every player,
.     twitching his tail and planting
.     his paws on each
.          of them.

Jack shows his teammates
each new trick Larry
.     has learned —
.     jumping as high as Jack’s shoulder,
.          sitting on Jack’s shoulders,
.          balancing on Jack’s head.

On the wooden platform,
waiting for the southbound train,
.          the Naps take turns
.          playing with Larry.

Jack makes sure
each player knows that Larry
.     is not just Jack’s dog,
.          he is the team’s dog, too —
.          the official mascot
.     of the Cleveland Naps.

Jack reminds them that they
are all proud of Larry and of
.          themselves, and he hints
.          that maybe they should study
.     how Larry behaves.

Boarding the train,
Jack flexes his arm
.     and stretches his shoulder,
.     heading for the aches
.            of spring training

.     and the hope
.     that his arm has healed.

 

Taken from Barbara’s new book, Jack and Larry: Jack Graney and Larry, the Cleveland Baseball Dog. You can get a copy of this story of the only live mascot ever held by a major league team by visiting Barbara’s website or watching for her at this week’s SABR convention in Minneapolis.

 

The Hall

by Doug Fahrendorff

Cooperstown
On Lake Otsego
Cooper’s “Glimmerglass”
A town
Where Norman Rockwell
Would feel at home
Perfect location
For baseball’s shrine
Plaques of boyhood heroes
Artifacts from games
Long past
An  afternoon
At Doubleday Field
Soaking up sun and history
This trip
Priceless