| By Roger Bonair-Agard,
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Favoured : 136 |
Published in : , Poetry |
(i) Bowler – opening spell
All morning, this blistering heat, oppressive even for one black as me, and accustomed to Carribean sun.
My tail is up, and even off a short run-up, I am a rainbow of fire and movement.
Still, not a wicket. My in-swinger is hostile and I haven’t even rolled my sleeves up yet. The batsmen can’t touch me. I have them beaten – all ends up.
In the stands, the sea of faces burned to a pink under their wide-brim hats is quiet and confused pretending they haven’t heard a fine edge, or detected the trapped stance in the thud of an L.B.W.
(ii) Umpire
I couldn’t care less how much this savage hoots and points his finger, how many screamed howzats?! at what he thinks is an out. If this boy thinks he will win an appeal from me with anything less than licking the stumps clean out of the ground, then this black fool must be more stupid than I first thought
This is our game. We taught these monkeys how to be dignified how to play the gentleman’s sport, how to be civilized. They’d still be in trees if not for us.
Now they want to change the game, embarrasing our batsmen, coming to the wicket top buttons undone, trying to frighten us with their shiny black chests.
I will show them. We are still their patrons in this game. Good white wickets are not this nigger’s, for the taking.
(iii) Bowler – just before noon
So apparently, even an obvious top edge is not enough to give me my due.
I’m going back to the long run-up To hell with strategy and field placement. I’m not even looking for the L.B.W. or the catch amongst the slips and gullies.
This next delivery will be pressure, short-pitched in-swinger from wide in the crease up and in at the hapless right-hander Let me show these fuckers who is Man here.
If I can’t get the wicket, I’ll take the white’s boy’s head.
Roger Bonair-Agard is a native of Trinidad and Tobago, a Cave Canem fellow and author of two collections of poetry; tarnish and masquerade (Cypher Books 2006) and GULLY (Cypher Books 2009). He is co-founder and Artistic Director of the louderARTS Project. He lives in Brooklyn.
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