Robert Wallace, "The Double Play"

In his sea-lit
distance, the pitcher winding
like a clock about to chime comes down with

the ball, hit 
sharply under the artificial
banks of arc lights, bounds like a vanishing string

over the green
to the shortstop magically
scoops to his right whirling above his invisible

shadows
in the dust redirects 
its flight to the running poised second baseman

pirouettes
leaping, above the slide, to through
from mid-air, across the colored tightened interval,

to the leaning-
out first baseman ends the dance
drawing it disappearing into his long brown glove

stretches. What
is too swift for deception
is final, lost, among the loosened figures

jogging off the field
(the pitcher walks), casual
in the space where the poem has happened.


Robert Wallace

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