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Children of the Court
  Their light figures charge up and down the court, the motivating language
  from mom and dad, a dreary jump shot
  rose colorlessly to a stutter. Their gestures, in exitment
  always with the pure geometry of a hand
  over their shoulder, lowers, and fades away.
  On the benches their hands and fingertips
  tremble in humoring continues prayers of balance
  and three-pointers. Then, the grind of brain
  and muscle, the deep breaths,
  the grunt of the body trying to give
  birth to itself on the court. In their toiling and gorgeous
  efforts, I wonder, are they truly loved
  by their fathers, by their mothers—
  joining their hands in hope, rocking
  back and forth to the score board?
  the players in their sleeveless jerseys
  and ankle-strangling sneakers
  stand empty, time frozen,
  SWISH!
  They go home happy,
  but for the ones that didn't win
  for the ones that didn't get the
  SWISH
  a father—a mother leans back in the Chevy’s front seat
  as their disappointment ricochets off the curbing air
  to the lowered rear window,
  they continue driving, 
  traveling toward home. A sparkling darkness
  of autumn’s gleaming light breaks through the windshield,
  men rise up in young boys, their dreams trampled upon 
  their wings clipped from their backs and feet.
The ball turns.
  
   

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This poem is an imitation of B.H. Fairchild’s “Old Men Playing Basketball.”