Fenway's diamond wrapped in green.
The sleeping jewel of Boston, the long-ago home
of the Babe and the Splendid Splinter,
Yaz and Fisk, born again on an April day.
All around, the Nation's red flowed
like blood down Beacon, Boylston and Brookline.
B's blazing a top wide smiles.
Under the shadow of the The Green Monster,
Lansdowne street is littered with the jetsam of camped fans.
The hardy faithful who waited through the morning chill
for a ticket. Now steam rising from the griddle of a
sausage vendor fills the air with scents of onions and peppers.
We enter the park, under the bleachers, to the
swarm of grown adults feeling the inspiration of Spring and
long lines for beer and hotdogs. The people posing with
the statue of Wally act like the children they are again.
We fought the throng through the park's dark belly,
Going against the flow until a man yelled, 'Make Way'
as a phalanx of blue coated police escorted jeweled
rings toward the waiting lords of the diamond.
Two cold beers for fourteen fifty seemed cheap
as they sloshed in their plastic cups. Calls of
'Got cold beverage here', elicits laughs
but no fewer bumps.
Anonymous elbow to elbow
I climbed the ramp with Peter Gammons.
Just two fans emerging into the sunlight of a new season.
The man in front of me turns and stares for
a minute and exchanges pleasantries with
the famous one of us.
During the ring ceremony, tiny hands clutched the billowing
new banner. 2004 would not be eclipsed.
The ghosts of the curse reminds us one more time
just how special that season was.
Big bellied men hid beers under magic seats,
laughing and bellowing, 'Sheffield you bum'.
My wife took picture after picture
And a self-proclaimed Fenway virgin cried
as we all remembered leaner days.