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    Let Us Talk of Basketball!

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    surest route to victory.”

      “It seems so out of place,

      “Not ladylike,” the mother joined

      In conversation, cold, disconnected,

      Somehow from her flesh and blood,

      She analyzed the attitudes of both

      Her oldest and herself. Three girls

      She’d spawned when all he ever wanted

      Was a son. Now all that joking with

      A ball comes home to roost on Thursday

      Nights and Fridays of the season.

      “You play with girls the

      Way you play with boys and what

      You get is basketball.” The father

      Squelched his smile.

      “And yet is not

      Possible to watch her moves

      Beneath the rim and think that

      She belongs in any other place

      Than on the edge of violation

      Waiting for the chance to twist

      Her frame and jump, acrobatics

      In mid-air. I’ve tried it;

      Vertical; a thing a parent

      Cannot do! It’s only after

      Things are over, and I go down

      To hug her sweating shoulders

      That I wonder most of all

      What it is of basketball

      So captivates the purpose

      Of existence. I’m in the

      Kitchen fixing soups; she’s on

      The driveway shooting hoops.”

      “And she does her flirting

      With disaster on the balls your

      Daughter passed her,” grinned the

      Father nodding to the lioness

      who returned his smile.

      (Forward)

      Initiator’s turn to choose

      The next whose view would

      Be upon the table for dis-

      Cussion and commisery. So

      With a beer and flourish, he

      Pops the tab its gaseous

      Relief familiar to the one who

      Paced, never stumbling on the

      Hearth, a long ellipse in neutral

      Carpet, by the fireplace he

      Crushed the soldier dead and quickly

      Put another in its stead, rapid

      Sucking ‘fore the foam

      Soiled their hostess’ vacuumed home,

      The forum on this winter eve

      That all who enter never leave

      But pay their way in conversation

      To the master of this house

      And his wife the lioness.

      “Money is what

      Basketball brings to this

      Community; money at the door

      Money at the store where only

      Weeks ago my Mastercharge did

      Choke and gag upon the price of

      shoes!”

      “Now of a kind they were, my

      Dear,” the wife reminded him,

      “That hold her ankles firm in place

      As dashing through the traffic

      She assaults the rim.”

      “Yes, but need they

      Be so fancy? Curved edges cost

      So much? Why are they all so

      Necessary? Is it, can it, only

      Be, the forces multiplied by ‘g’

      That work against my daughter’s

      Legs? It’s that tiny bit of curve

      I’m told, along the edges of the

      Sole, that takes the impact of

      Her leap when it Earthward comes to

      Claim its price upon the way she

      Walks to class the following day,

      That makes the choice unconsciously

      To flip support beneath instead of

      Turning traitor to her wishes for

      The layup into points to further

      Gild her reputation as the highest

      Scoring forward in the league.

      Such a piece of grand design

      Upon an item lowly

      Stomped upon the floor each night!

      And still I think, if only

      They did not cost so much!

      Red and blue and white

      The colors of her country

      Are the specially constructed

      Uppers, laced so carefully around

      Her second pair of socks. They’re

      Marked with her initials! Like

      The kneepads that she wears!

      The mark has nothing else to

      Do but make her feel professional

      With a felt-tipped pen she writes

      Two letters and the periods that

      Separate the symbols of her name

      Upon the property that’s hers for

      Going nightly into war that they

      Conduct among the lines and circles.

      I read S.I. so faithfully and

      Do discover what it is that makes

      Her mark her belongings so, she

      Never does with nicer things, only

      Kneepads, socks, and bag

      Bear the in-group sign: that’s

      How they do it in the leagues

      of men.

      I see their pictures—on the

      Bench with scattered towels they

      Use a bunch each minute of a

      Frantic time—and each has

      Markings on his knee, initials

      For the laun-der-y

      Never go to court

      Without an elemen’try sort

      Of superstition, could we?

      No. The answer’s clear.

      Could I have another beer?”

      Refueled he hurtled through the night

      With his thoughts of those who shared

      The screaming tumult greeting all

      The fans that chose to gather there

      In high school gyms’ ungodly dins

      The bands exploded into fight

      On each and every conf’rence night

      As from the dressing room they

      Came in single file around the

      Floor and bouncing pompoms showed

      The crowd the way to yell while

      His daughter led the pack with

      Thund’ring dribbles, pumping hearts

      Right hand, left hand, behind

      Her back then flipped a firey

      Bounce pass to

      Her friend and partner Mary Lou.

      They never shared an ounce of time

      Except along the home court baseline

      And in the halls between their classes

      With their eyes reviewed the passes

      Made for working as a team

      Scoring plays that seemed routine

      Kickout blockout get the rebound

      From the skirmish of the backboard

      Mary Lou and then his daughter

      Fought the good fight for each other

      But late at night they hit the sack

      A universe apart; they lacked the

      Geographic culture ties that bound

      Some forward pairs together.

      Mary Lou was black.

      (Forward)

      What was this child of broken home

      Poorer section down between

      The mainline of the Burlington

      And Northern doing in the suburbs

      Fair? Her fingers put her there.

      Not the ones with which she felt

      The roughened surface

      Of the ball she pounded to the floor

      Or stole with cunning quick finesse

      Their special brand of full court press

      But the ones which as a child

      She’d taken pencil then to paper

      And turned the lines upon themselves

      To gain control the way she did

      With everything that came her way

      Amid the heated rivalry

      She now enjoyed as daily traveled

      To a culture not envisioned

      Any more than starting guards

      Who never had to work at all

      Whose fathers bought them basketballs

    &nb
    sp; Instead of left them in the street

      To find their places, make their route

      Torn by evolutionary forces

      Working in the concrete wildness

      Finding refuge in a home

      A mother tried so hard to make by

      Service as a janitor.

      Through the night she saved the paper

      Tossed by those executives

      Into the files from every which

      Escape was lost except as Mabel

      Read her girl-child’s new desires

      And salvaged all the stuff she could:

      Contracts old, in legal style,

      Mis-printed forms their language

      Stuffed with education in itself

      for Mary Lou.

      But the girl

      Ignored the front and con-

      Centrated on the back, which

      Then became the front by virtue

      Of her hands’ true mark attack

      With pencil broken as her life

      And those of all her brothers

      She bent the lines in imagery

      Abstractions of her friends and

      Neighbors. By the time she’d

      Reached eleven it was obvious

      She’d been given gifts beyond

      Resources strained of an

      Inner city school.

      Special help: she was gifted.

      So they arranged a transfer to

      A place where she could receive

      All the program had to offer

      No intention to deceive

      At high school conference never made

      Mention of her other talents.

      They brought her to the new affluence

      Let her walk the hallowed halls

      Lavished her with art supplies:

      Brushes, ink, and basketballs.

      Basketballs?

      Yes; it took a week

      For Mary Lou to hit a peak.

      Back at home they cried a foul

      Spun their hands symbolic protest

      Scuttled now their championship

      But her mother stood beside her

      Strong and tearful as she handled

      Bristol board and Strathmore fine

      Mary Lou had taken special time

      To bring her, leave upon the

      Table, for her to find in afternoon

      Waking from her all night labor

      As she dressed and cooked again

      Before her journey into suites

      Of bankers’ cloistered hierarchies.

      In the winter afternoon, Mary Lou

      Away at practice, Mabel rested

      For a moment; and held the paper

      softly.

      Then she whispered “draw yo’ pictures, child!”

      And at that instant way ‘cross town

      Mary Lou was feeling down

      For having missed some easy shots

      There came a mysterious surge of strength

      And Mary Lou raised up her chin

      And said in angry whispers: some

      Day Mama’ll never work again!

      (Guard)

      Such a calm and loving couple

      Always last to join a fray

      OR confrontation with the values

      Leading lesser souls astray

      From the freedom God and

      Country—health and wealth

      Were theirs a joy, for

      After years of only-childness

      Late in life they’d had a boy

      Whose toddling chances always guided

      Evenings out, commitments time and

      Time again denied; baby sitters

      Were a problem: neighbor girls

      Had moved away, grown to college

      Full time working, chasing lads

      potential med school.

      You’d think advantages accrue

      To children of a pair like this

      That rare indeed an evening out

      Would
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