1919 by Anonymous

Many great men and women have written entire books about every aspect of the game; however, other than "Casey At Bat," few know about some of the other great poems that have appeared honoring our national pastime. Listed below is the baseball poem: 1919.

"The playing field becomes a landscape, fixed and isolated and trapped, between the borders of its own fabrication." - Anonymous
1919

by Anonymous

Published: Chicago Times (1919)

Before the threat
And dismal cold gray
of mourning
Came the sun.

And Charlie Comiskey
should've turned in his sleep
should've turned in his sleep
shoud've turned...

Insane Sun
Floating above the earth
Like some extravagant madman
Spending next year's allowance.

The same burning sun
In the same afternoons
In all the cities
East
and somewhat
West
of the
Great Mississippi.

should've turned in his sleep

Too many
Suns
In too many
Cities
Too many faces
Faces
in the face of it
All.

How much grief?
Too
Much
Grief.
Too many faces
Too many suns
Far too many of too many things
Far too many of too many things.

should've turned in his sleep

More like Dali,
less Victoria.
The playing field becomes a landscape
Fixed and isolated and trapped
Between the borders of its own fabrication.

The stadium faces
Blur
in the afternoon sun.
The celebration
Ends
in the afternoon sun
The victory becomes
Defeat
in the afternoon sun.

Morality
Victoria Escaped
Insane sun.

How many of how many things.

The death of honor
The end of a fading
And final trust.

should've turned in his sleep

And as
The unsettling dust
Settles in the throat of all men
There are not enough beers
In all the bars
In all the worlds
To flush out the stale bitterness
Of too many afternoons
In too many suns.

And Charlie Chomsky
woke up
and deposited the nightmare
in the pillow of his dream.

1919 by Anonymous



Did you know that the White Sox baseball sign used at the top of the poem is an original hand painted sign designed for a train station that sold at auction for nearly two-thousand dollards?

Charles Comiskey played first base and became the first manager to win four consecutive pennants. He won those pennants with the American Association St. Louis Browns between 1885 and 1888.

Do you agree or disagree with the actions taken by Charles Comiskey? Did his penny-pinching help or hurt baseball? Share your thoughts on our message board.