by Donald Hall
Against the bright grass the white-knickered players, tense, seize, and attend. A moment ago, outfielders and infielders adjusted their clothing, glanced at the sun and settled forward, hands on knees; the pitcher walked back of the hill, established his cap and returned; the catcher twitched a forefinger; the batter rotated his bat in a slow circle. But now they pause: wary, exact, suspended— while abiding moonrise lightens the angel of the overgrown hardens, and Walter Blake Adams, who died at fourteen, waits under the footbridge.