1844.18

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Melville (Maybe) Describes Baseball Game Poetically

Salience Peripheral
Tags Ball in the Culture
City/State/Country: MA, USA
Game Base Ball
Immediacy of Report Contemporary
Age of Players Juvenile
Text

And now hurrah! for the speeding ball
Is flung in viewless air,
And where it will strike in its rapid fall
The boys are hastening there--
And the parted lip and the eager eye
Are following its descent,
Whilst the baffl'd stumbler's falling cry
With th'exulting shout is blent.
The leader now of either band
Picks cautiously his men,
And the quickest foot and the roughest hand
Are what he chooses then.
And see!the ball with swift rebound,
Flies from the swinging bat,
While the player spurns the beaten ground,
Nor heeds his wind-caught hat.
But the ball is stopp'd in its quick career,
And is sent with a well-aim'd fling,
And he dodges to feel it whistling near,
Or leaps at its sudden sting,
Whilst the shot is hail'd with a hearty shout,
As the wounded one stops short,
For his 'side' by the luckless blow is out--
And the others wait their sport.

Sources

This poem, published pseudonymously as the work of "William M. Christy" in 1845, is Melville's first published book, per Melville scholar Jeanne C. Howes, author of a monograph entitled '"Poet of a Morning: Herman Melville and the 'Redburn Poem': Redburn: Or the Schoolmaster of a Morning". 19cbb post by John Thorn, July 6, 2004

Warning

In the case of the Redburn
poem, a strong competing interpretation concludes that HM is not
its author. I can't argue either side of Howes' hypothesis since
I have not read her work, and I only have a couple hundred words
of notes on the topic, but I think we all readily understand that
the attribution of Melville as author of this four canto poem is
not universally accepted." 19cbb post by Stephen Hoy, July 6, 2004

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Submitted by Bob Tholkes,
Submission Note 2/12/2015



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