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In this blog post of mine, I include some of my favorite baseball poetry books.
http://herm4444.blogspot.com/2012/08/my ... films.html
In this one, part of the piece refers to a poem I was asked to write --
http://herm4444.blogspot.com/2012/09/yo ... clean.html
The poem (archived at the Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum) follows:
The Railroad Stop in Syracuse
Syracuse —
a stop on the Underground Railroad
for slaves of the mid 1800s South,
escapees from the plantations
that raised a white crop—the cotton they picked,
the symbol of slavery.
They sneaked off,
and on their way north to Canada, and freedom,
they might spend a night hidden in Syracuse.
Jackie Robinson arrived there in 1946
on the train from Montreal where he worked on
Mr. Branch Rickey’s farm,
a farm that also raised a white crop—
white ballplayers ―
to send south to Brooklyn.
But Jackie was following the opposite route to escape his slavery,
the slavery of the mid 1900s that kept the black man
off the white man’s land,
off the green grass and rich dirt
of his athletic plantations.
When he left that train from Montreal,
on his ride from slavery,
that white man’s train with its
black porters and black conductors
and white engineer,
and stepped into the bright sunlight
and the harsh glare of the public eye
he was no longer just another Negro
aspiring to a white man’s job.
He was a black man opening a door that could not be closed,
accompanied by every man and woman and child
who had ever ridden that other railroad —
fellow passengers to freedom.
© 1996
Hermon R. Card
http://herm4444.blogspot.com/2012/08/my ... films.html
In this one, part of the piece refers to a poem I was asked to write --
http://herm4444.blogspot.com/2012/09/yo ... clean.html
The poem (archived at the Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum) follows:
The Railroad Stop in Syracuse
Syracuse —
a stop on the Underground Railroad
for slaves of the mid 1800s South,
escapees from the plantations
that raised a white crop—the cotton they picked,
the symbol of slavery.
They sneaked off,
and on their way north to Canada, and freedom,
they might spend a night hidden in Syracuse.
Jackie Robinson arrived there in 1946
on the train from Montreal where he worked on
Mr. Branch Rickey’s farm,
a farm that also raised a white crop—
white ballplayers ―
to send south to Brooklyn.
But Jackie was following the opposite route to escape his slavery,
the slavery of the mid 1900s that kept the black man
off the white man’s land,
off the green grass and rich dirt
of his athletic plantations.
When he left that train from Montreal,
on his ride from slavery,
that white man’s train with its
black porters and black conductors
and white engineer,
and stepped into the bright sunlight
and the harsh glare of the public eye
he was no longer just another Negro
aspiring to a white man’s job.
He was a black man opening a door that could not be closed,
accompanied by every man and woman and child
who had ever ridden that other railroad —
fellow passengers to freedom.
© 1996
Hermon R. Card