I Dream the Dodgers Back to Brooklyn
By Matthew Johnson
I want the Dodgers back in Brooklyn.
Real Brooklyn, with pigeon-coop rooftops
And stickball kids who cuss in five languages while at lunch.
I want Jackie back, stealing home like it’s owed to him,
As if America is just a constant curveball,
And you've got no choice but to go for it.
I want Jackie juking gravity.
I want a hot dog in each hand,
And a halo of ketchup around my mouth.
I want Ebbets Field, not a memory,
But brick and echoes and peanuts cracked by hand,
And bleachers packed like rush-hour trains,
Filled with old ladies heckling like prophets.
I want to believe in losing again,
The kind a Yankees fan could never understand.
The kind where you have scraped a knee And have often been told, no, over and over again.
I want to sit in the bleachers with my grandfather,
Whose heart was broken when the Dodgers left Brooklyn,
And see him fall in love all over again….
From Poet Matthew Johnson's Facebook post:
"It has been an incredibly exciting past couple of days, as I recently learned that I was named a Finalist for the E.E. Cummings Poetry Prize by the New England Poetry Club for my poem, “I Dream the Dodgers Back to Brooklyn,” and that my poem, “The One Movie Scene That Always Gets Me,” was selected by The Indianapolis Review as a Best of the Net nominee."
I caught up with Johnson recently and asked him these questions:
From looking at your picture, you don't seem old enough to have experienced Ebbets Field in Brooklyn. Did you pick the mind of your grandfather about old time Brooklyn, and the Dodgers? I can taste the hotdogs; I can hear the roar of the fans, a very vivid poem, indeed!
- I truly wish I had the chance to pick the mind of my grandfather. Sadly, I never really did. I’m grateful that I knew him, but he passed when I was still a child. I was too young to understand the concept of nostalgia or to ask those larger questions about the Dodgers or about life itself. Still, I’ve been lucky enough to inherit pieces of that world through my father, who has told me about how my grandfather and great-uncles were devoted Brooklyn Dodger fans and were loyal to the team of Jackie Robinson, Dan Bankhead, Roy Campanella, and Don Newcombe. I have considered myself a wandering sports historian/amateur sports scholar. Since I was a child, I grew up reading books/articles and watching documentaries on sports figures before my time; since I love the teams and athletes of my time (the late '90s into the early 2000s), I wanted to know who came before and who inspired the games they play now. I love sports, and I especially love sports history.
The poem brought to mind the lines from a Simon and Garfunkel song, " Where have you gone Joe DiMaggio-- a nation turns its lonely eyes to you." Is there a yearning for this kind of community in this divisive world?
I think many of us ache for that feeling again—the comfort of community, the poetry of shared experience. Maybe that’s why nostalgia tugs so insistently at us: it’s less about the past itself, and more about the longing to feel connected.
I do think there’s a deep yearning for that kind of community, now more than ever. Sports is one of those few gathering places where differences could be blurred. And despite the hate and vitriol that someone like Jackie Robinson, and so many Black players, endured when they broke baseball’s color barrier, time and courage taught fans to embrace them. It wasn’t a perfect process, and I often wish Jackie could have been celebrated simply for existing, whether his career average was .311 or .211. But in those moments, sports became (and can continue to serve as a place) for a nation learning, slowly, to embrace its differences and move as one whole.
I read that you have an interest in the Harlem Renaissance, a literary and art movement in the early part of the last century. Do you think African Americans are in a sort of arts/lit renaissance now?
- I view the ongoing creative works of African Americans as an extension of the Harlem Renaissance. It's not a second Harlem Renaissance, but a continuation of the voices and spirits of artists such as Langston Hughes, Zora Neale Hurston, Paul Robeson, Aaron Douglas, Oscar Michaeux, and Duke Ellington (among so many others). What I see today is that same thread of creativity flowing through both similar and different forms: literature, film, music, fashion, athletics, and digital art. The mediums have evolved, but the message: the insistence on being seen, heard, and celebrated, remains unchanged. Black artists today are still exploring the complexity of identity, the beauty of resilience and hope, and the power of imagination to reimagine a world that has not always been kind. In that sense, the Harlem Renaissance never truly ended; it simply transformed. Each new generation adds its own rhythm to the same song.
You have said your faith informs your work. Explain.
My faith informs my work in the sense that it reminds me of purpose, humility, and connection. It’s not something I actively publicize, but it's definitely woven into all of my work, as my faith shapes how I see the world and how I try to express myself in it. My faith helps me get a sense that every story, every person, every act of creation carries a spark of the divine. When I write, I’m guided by that belief: art, in this instance, poetry and literature, can serve as both expression and service. It can heal, uplift, and bear witness to truth. My faith keeps me grounded when I’m uncertain and pushes me to approach my work with integrity and empathy. I try not to preach; instead, I let faith express itself through presence and through the compassion, honesty, and hope that often shape my words and the stories I share.