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| THE COURTS AT LAWTON STREET | |
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March 26, 2002 |
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ROBERT PINSKY: The poet Alan Shapiro played on his high school and college basketball teams, and now he teaches poetry at basketball powerhouse North Carolina. In fact, legendary coach Dean Smith once invited Shapiro to serve as official timekeeper - a role Shapiro found too pressured. Alan Shapiro's poem, "The Courts at Lawton Street," opens
with a dreamy evocation: A slow impersonal music winds The basketball court is a world of its own that is like the world - for us watching the game on television or for the players on an asphalt court like Shaprio's. His poem closes, as it opened, with it gaze toward the deceptions, risks, hopes and failures of the real world: Now there are three balls, three drab moons And when singing, "Got to sweeten up |
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