The Seventh Inning

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1. Baseball, I warrant, is not the whole 
occupation of the aging boy.
Far from it: There are cats and roses; 
there is her water body. She fills
the skin of her legs up, like water; 
under her blouse, water assembles, 
swelling lukewarm; her mouth is water, 
her cheekbones cool water; water flows 
in her rapid hair. I drink water

2. from her body as she walks past me 
to open a screen door, as she bends 
to weed among herbs, or as she lies 
beside me at five in the morning 
in submarine light. Curt Davis threw 
a submarine ball, terrifying
to right-handed batters. Another 
pleasure, thoroughly underrated, 
is micturition, which is even

3. commoner than baseball. It begins 
by announcing itself more slowly 
and less urgently than sexual
desire, but (confusingly) in the
identical place. Ignorant men
therefore on occasion confuse beer-
drinking with love; but I have discussed 
adultery elsewhere. We allow
this sweet release to commence itself,

4. addressing a urinal perhaps, 
perhaps poised over a white toilet 
with feet spread wide and head tilted back: 
oh, what’delicious permission! what 
luxury of letting go! what luxe 
yellow curve of mildest ecstasy! 
Granted we may not compare it to 
poignant and crimson bliss, it is as 
voluptuous as rain all night long

5. after baseball in August’s parch. The 
jade plant’s trunk, as thick as a man’s wrist, 
urges upward thrusting from packed dirt, 
with Chinese vigor spreading limbs out 
that bear heavy leaves—palpable, dark, 
juicy, green, profound: They suck, the way 
bleacher fans claim inhabitants of
box seats do. The Fourth of July we 
exhaust stars from sparklers in the late

6. twilight. We swoop ovals of white-gold 
flame, making quick signatures against
an imploding dark. The five-year-old 
girl kisses the young dog goodbye and 
chases the quick erratic kitten. 
When she returns in a few years as 
a tall shy girl, she will come back to 
a dignified spreading cat and a
dog ash-gray on the muzzle. Sparklers

7. expel quickly this night of farewell: 
If they didn’t burn out, they wouldn’t 
be beautiful. Kurt, may I hazard 
an opinion on expansion? Last
winter meetings, the major leagues (al-
ready meager in ability,
scanty in starting pitchers) voted
to add two teams. Therefore minor league 
players will advance all too quickly,

8. with boys in the bigs who wouldn’t have 
made double-A forty years ago.
Directors of player personnel
will search like poets scrambling in old 
notebooks for unused leftover lines,
but when was the last time anyone
cut back when he or she could expand? 
Kurt, I get the notion that you were
another who never discarded

9. anything, a keeper from way back. 
You smoked cigarettes, in inflation-
times rolled from chopped-up banknotes, billions 
inhaled and exhaled as cancerous 
smoke. When commerce woke, Men was awake. 
If you smoked a cigar, the cigar 
band discovered itself glued into 
collage. Ongoing life became the 
material of Kurtschwittersball.

© Donald Hall