Chath pierSath: The Poetry of Baseball

Fenway Park (web photo courtesy of bostoncalendar)

American-Based

by Chath pierSath

 

The batter spits.

Shoves his left foot against the diamond.

He makes eye contact with the pitcher.

He tilts down the right edge of his cap to buckle it tight to each strand of his hair.

 

It’s him against the other team—nine of them, all dressed the same,

With a different number, each bat a signature of each man’s worth,

Aiming for the same goal:

Play to win.

 

Out there,

America shines,

Business as usual,

Subliminal and routine,

CITGO and Dunkin Donuts,

Samuel Adams and Coca-Cola, and Bank of America and JetBlue.

Foxwoods, National Car Rental, and New Balance made-in-America shoes.

Dollars are taped to the store walls.

Democracy and free enterprise are fly balls, fouls, and strikes.

 

A face shot of a pitcher is paired with each batter on the screen.

Heroes, Red Sox-ers, Bostonians thirty-thousand plus, dots cheering in waves.

Flowers in brilliant colors sway to hovering light towers.

Prudential and joyous, prosperity and peace are familiar, comradery ways of life.

 

American God watches from above,

Catholic and Puritan,

New England and foreign.

Baseball superstition is spit and bubble gum.

 

The holy virgin birthed sons of baseball from Cuba

To the Dominican Republic island

As far east as the Japanese shore,

American-based game is worshipped

With ritualistic creed and fervor.

 

On a diamond-shaped infield,

Carpeted with grass,

The man at bat,

In well-fitted uniform,

Prepares for the pitcher’s bullet, ninety-plus-mile-per-hour speed.

 

More failures than there are hits.

Slow and patient, each batter meditated on the coming ball.

A home run gets fans up their feet, cheering for the star-spangled banner wave.

To be an American is to play baseball.

To be Bostonian is to be a Red Sox.

 

Each player a man of secrets and techniques, skills and talents, batting for the run,

Not out to war, but for money and fame.

 

One man would rise above the rest

And lead to record history

And bounty of heroic cheers and joy

Extending to little boys and girls

 

Singing Take me out to the ball game. Take me out to the park . . .

 

Fenway bathed in cream hues of gold, flashing red for the cheering crowd.

American-based is worth every hour.

–Chath pierSath

(“American-Based” is from the poetry collection On Earth Under Sky by Chath pierSath forthcoming from Loom Press in Fall 2020)

2 Responses to Chath pierSath: The Poetry of Baseball

  1. Maria says:

    I very much enjoyed this poem, despite not really understanding much about baseball. But the way Chath describes it all, you almost feel like you are at the park. Love how the author is able to convey so much using short sentences. As you read the poem you can’t help but notice, the political remarks made by the author as he describes the whole experience of attending a ball game. Very well done.

  2. Luke Young says:

    As a lifelong baseball fan, yet one disenfranchised with what it has become, I love all the elements that come out in this poem. It brings it to the human level of physicality and competition to patience and the corporate. It truly is the great American sport and Chath captures it perfectly! Always a joy and pleasure to read his work.