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On August 22, 1957, Pete Rademacher fought Floyd Patterson in Seattle for the world heavyweight championship. In the stands that day were two boxing fans from the English Department of the University of Washington: Theodore Roethke, a forty-nine-year-old professor, and his twenty-nine-year-old student James Wright, who was celebrating the completion of his Ph.D. Each was one of the leading poets of his generation. The year before, Wright's first book of poems, "The Green Wall," had been chosen by W. H. Auden for the Yale Younger Poets award; Roethke's most recent book, "The Waking," had won the 1954 Pulitzer Prize.
Neither Roethke, the son of a greenhouse owner ...