“. . . the
part of West Madison that has the flophouses and the signs—‘Second Shot Your
Favorite Whiskey ½ Price,’ ‘Mamie’s Day Old & Fresh Broken Bakery Goods,’ ‘We
Dare Them! The Largest and Best Bowl of Soup in Town,’ ‘Our 20-Ounce Schooner,
15 cents,’ ‘Jesus Saves—Are You Saved?’ ‘Pants $1.00 Up,’ ‘2 Strickly Fresh Eggs
Tost and Buter, 25 cents.’”
Like any
good journalist, Liebling is a scrupulous detail man. He gets the little, easy-to-ignore things right. He may be covering a boxing match but he’s not too busy
to relish the swarm of life outside the ring:
“Before a
shack bearing signs that read, ‘Shine 25c’ and ‘First Class Shine 20c,’ I
stopped. I knew from the street numbers that I was now at about the
three-quarter pole, and any kind of chair looked good. ‘I want a first-class
shine,’ I said. ‘Twenty cents.’
“’We sold
the last first-class shine yesterday,’ the shoeshine man said. ‘Got only
twenty-five-cent shines left.’”
Liebling
tells us the shoeshine man is going to the fight and is putting his money on
Walcott: “‘I bought two tickets for me and my wife. I also got a hundred up
against a hundred fifty that Joe will go twelve rounds. The bell rings for the
end of the twelfth round, I win.’ I figured he was going to lose four hundred
shoeshines.”
Liebling was
right. In the first round, Marciano hit Walcott with a left hook followed by a
powerful right uppercut. Walcott landed flat on his back, feet in the air. Marciano
was winner by a knockout at 2:25. Liebling’s account, “Long Toodle, Short Fight,”was published in the May 30, 1953 issue of The New Yorker and collected
in The Sweet Science (1956). In the Library of America volume that
includes that collection of boxing pieces, Liebling’s report – article? story? essay?
– is thirteen and a half pages long, roughly the length of Hazlitt’s “The Fight.” I’m not a fight fan. I’m a prose fan. I vote for "essay." Purists will argue but journalism-as-literature
doesn’t get much better than this.
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