Ca s'appelle "Baseball Canto".
Watching baseball, sitting in the sun, eating popcorn, 
reading  Ezra Pound,
and wishing that Juan Marichal would hit a hole right  through the
Anglo-Saxon tradition in the first Canto
and demolish  the barbarian invaders.
When the San Francisco Giants take the field 
and  everybody stands up for the National Anthem,
with some Irish tenor's  voice piped over the loudspeakers,
with all the players struck dead  in their places 
and the white umpires like Irish cops in their black  suits and little
black caps pressed over their hearts,
Standing  straight and still like at some funeral of a blarney bartender,
and  all facing east,
as if expecting some Great White Hope or the  Founding Fathers to
appear on the horizon like 1066 or 1776.
But  Willie Mays appears instead,
in the bottom of the first,
and a  roar goes up as he clouts the first one into the sun and takes
off,  like a footrunner from Thebes.
The ball is lost in the sun and  maidens wail after him 
as he keeps running through the Anglo-Saxon  epic.
And Tito Fuentes comes up looking like a bullfighter
in his  tight pants and small pointy shoes. 
And the right field bleechers go  made with Chicanos and blacks 
and Brooklyn beer-drinkers, 
"Tito!  Sock it to him, sweet Tito!"
And sweet Tito puts his foot in the  bucket 
and smacks one that don't come back at all, 
and flees  around the bases 
like he's escaping from the United Fruit Company.
As  the gringo dollar beats out the pound.
And sweet Tito beats it out  like he's beating out usury,
not to mention fascism and  anti-semitism.
And Juan Marichal comes up, 
and the Chicano  bleechers go loco again, 
as Juan belts the first ball out of sight, 
and  rounds first and keeps going 
and rounds second and rounds third, 
and  keeps going and hits paydirt 
to the roars of the grungy populace.
As  some nut presses the backstage panic button 
for the tape-recorded  National Anthem again, 
to save the situation. 
But it don't  stop nobody this time,
in their revolution round the loaded white  bases,
in this last of the great Anglo-Saxon epics,
in the  territorio libre of Baseball. 
Signé du grand poète beat :Lawrence Ferlinghetti                                                                                                                                         
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