Elysian Fields

by Ellie Bozmarova

"The American National Game of Baseball Grand Match For The Championship at The Elysian Fields Hoboken" oil on Canvas. Public Domain.

The Elysian Fields veer East coast-ward, 

and if you’re looking down from Heaven,

you’d see someone on 11th street and Washington 

had a crazy sense of humor.

In Hoboken they play baseball on the soft, swept grass.

In Hades, sunners sunbathe, relieved and insolent

like they’d won some game, 

their good deeds shining back like a UV reflector

visible across the Hudson river

and the River Lethe. 

All the while Tantalus sits nearby

contemplating suicide.

He fails to carry out the act,

realizing with a pitiful moan

that he is already dead— 

but he quickly forgets.

He sits, benched

until another player walks by 

then he says hey,

I’ll give you five bucks for your bat

at the baseball player’s turned back. 

If you ever hear pitiful sobbing

choking from centuries-old bleachers 

on the edge of New Jersey,

you are probably standing

at the gates of heaven

or the gates of hell.


Ellie Bozmarova was born in Sofia, Bulgaria. Her work has appeared in The Common, phoebe, TIMBER Journal, and elsewhere. She holds an MFA in Creative Nonfiction from Goucher College and is the 2020 Women’s National Book Association-San Francisco First Place Winner in Nonfiction for an excerpt from her immigrant memoir, which is available for representation. You can find more of her work at www.elliebozmarova.com.