Mom was light by December
and Daddy told everyone
Kate Smith waited a few days
to Bless America
because of me.
I walked home from school,
past the Cross Roads,
where “that devil Forrest”
beat Sturgis at home 96-223,
before heading out
to battle
carpetbaggers and scalawags.
It was here Ma and Pa
ran the store
while I sat and listened,
as Bobby cracked the Shot
That Made Me Cry.
I too hit the ball hard,
but couldn’t make it
’round the base paths
fast enough.
Dejected, I left Juco
and went to State U where
The Great Southern Pen
was waiting for me.
Making good,
I taught on a foreign coast.
I showed kids
how to lunge for the ball.
Years later,
a diving catch saved The Game,
but the home team lost.
I returned home
to a land divided
twice over.
As colors ran together,
students fled into my classroom.
Many cried rivers
but met their duty
like my devil dog son.
I have taught The Pen
(and The Bible)
time and time again,
around the world,
and on tv.
Time is my misfortune.
I Google myself,
and am met by
a transgender photographer
from South Africa.
As I stare out the window,
at orphaned cotton,
desperately clinging
to jaundiced stalks of Johnson grass,
wafting like goose down
in the breeze,
I catch a glimpse
of my reflection:
A myopic, half-deaf
gimp waiting for cancer.
I consider Richard Cory.