The Religion of a Game

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Sestina

Every young boy has the same dream:

The grass,

The crack of hitting a round ball square,

The epic moment

Where every star-struck eye

In the crowd is focused on you.

 

But now the crowd is only

The fervent fathers of the other boys,

Future stars—in baseball or in life,

Roaming the same grass our ancestors roamed

Before—this epic shift in civilization

Seemingly summed up by each deafening crack.

 

Soon enough the crack of the bat shrunk compared

To the crack of kids’ heads hitting lockers, an eager crowd watching

As the epic dream of a life in baseball suddenly

Not so possible to this young boy, the

Sacred grass of the ball field, now a feared recess

Where the once future stars don’t shine so bright—

 

Not as bright as the white lights that scout

promised. Cracker jacks now sold at the game not bought,

Grass mowed as short as some careers—daily,

The crowds now loud enough to drown the howls of disapproving fathers.

A new family, a new father, new brothers in the form of the other boys,

Each dreaming of their own epic shot

 

At an epic career, an unforgettable moment, game, season—

Anything that might make the scouts write simply: “star.”

Only a select few of those boys

Get to feel the crack of major league wood,

Hear the crowd flirting with the organist,

Reach down and feel the same grass the greats once grasped,

 

The greenest grass—that makes the true lovers of the

Game wonder why some only play for that epic money—

Wonder why the crowd is no longer enough,

Wonder why these stars are fueled no longer

By the once deafening crack, but the cashing of

Checks—silhouettes of the boys they once were.

 

Is the grass really greener here?

He always said as a boy he’d play for

Nothing—the crowd, breathless from each

 

Crack, was enough.

The epic life he always dreamed of

On that shooting star, never eclipsing the religion of the game.

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