This Poem was Submitted By: JAMES H SCARBROUGH On Date: 2001-03-11 20:03:50 . . . Click Here To Mail this Poem to a Friend!

To Listen to Music While Reading this Poem, just Click Here!

Click Here To add this poem to your "Voting Possibilities" list!


VISIONS OF DREAMS

The train pulled northbound out of Baltimore,   on a one-way Tiger track. A young broadcaster arrived in Detroit,   a new voice of a Tiger, never looking back. In his young dreams he held new visions,   to call play-by-play 'up north'. An Oriole loss, ever a Detroit gain,   visions of dreams plunged forth. A young boy sits on his 'up-north' porch,   wearing a dusty navy blue Tiger hat. Oiling up his tattered baseball glove,   across his knees, resting his old baseball bat. Reaching over to tune his radio dial,   realizes life is not what it always seems. Finding a voice so golden-friendly, closes his   eyes to visualize, his own field of dreams. "Good evening Tiger fans, it's a great night   for baseball, with a sky so bright and clear. A few good seats left at 'The Corner'    and plenty of time to make it out here." There was no television to watch in those days,   not many families had even black and white. But the golden voice of Ernie Harwell's, it that   which painted my visions of dreams so bright. The neighborhood players had all gone home,   our own backyard diamond was drawing dim. Besides, real Tigers were set to take the field,   and a true artist would be describing them. Unseen faces of Kaline, Maxwell, Bruton or Yost,   Fernandez, Kuehn, Virgil, Phillips or Wertz.  Pictured for sure in common, they all fought for,   an Old English D on their white flannal shirts. Cash hitting left and Colovito right added power   when they arrived over from the Indians. Southpaw Aguirre and the righthander Buning,   together chipped in better than twenty wins. Didn't matter the pitcher taking the mound,   Lary, Woodeshick, Hoeft, Regan, Mossi or Foytack. If they lost their lead, the game or the series,   my heros, always would come fighting back. Each of them a hero, as Ernie called the game.   Heros in a mind, visions no one can replace. Yet, Ernie painted me in the batter's box,   as I dreamed, each uniform wore my face. Oh what a thrill it could be, as a dreaming kid    hears, Ernie calling out a brand new name, "In a major league debut, an 'up-north' kid steps   from the on-deck circle, into his debut game." From the highs and lows, from then til now,   he called the great teams of '68 and '84. No Tiger has delivered more hits, RBI's or homers,   pitched longer nor ever contibuted more. As so many Tigers, heros of dreams gone by, like   the homer "Long-Gone", he calls out so bold. The voice of a hero, forever a gemstone of gold,   has forever stood timeless and priceless,   "Like the house by the side of the road!"  

Copyright © March 2001 JAMES H SCARBROUGH

Additional Notes:
NOTE: 'The Corner' is a name that the featured character in this poem aptly nicknamed Tiger Stadium a few years back, because of is familiar location at the corner of Michigan & Trumble. Maybe other quotes may have to be explained later after reading, if not fully understood, as this poem maybe somewhat 'regional'.


Sorry, there are no critiques for this poem in our system... If the poem is older, the critiques have been purged! Poetry Contests Online at The Poetic Link

Click HERE to return to ThePoeticLink.com Database Page!