Friday, December 27, 2013
earlier days I’d been to sea with a tall rawboned fellow from Ruston, Louisiana.
Called Big Slim Hubbard, William Holmes Hubbard, who was hobo by
choice; as a little boy he’d seen a hobo come up to ask his mother for a
piece of pie, and she had given it to him, and when the hobo went off
down the road the little boy had said, “Ma, what is that fellow?” “Why
that’s a ho-bo.” “Ma, I want to be a ho-bo someday.” “Shet your mouth,
that’s not for the like of the Hubbards.” But he never forgot that day,
and grew up, after a short spell playing football at LSU, and did become
a hobo. Slim and I spent many nights telling stories and spitting
tobacco juice in paper containers. There was something so indubitably
reminiscent of Big Slim Hubbard in Mississippi Gene’s demeanor that I
came out and said “Do you happen to have met a fellow called Big Slim
Hubbard somewhere?” And he said “You mean the tall fellow with the big
laugh?” “Well, that sounds like him. He came from Ruston, Louisiana.”
“That’s right, Louisiana Slim he’s sometimes called. Yessir, I shore
have met Big Slim.” “And he used to work in the East Texas oil fields?”
“East Texas is right. And now he’s punching cows.” And that was exactly
right; and still I couldn’t believe Gene could really have known Slim,
whom I’d been looking for more or less for years. “And he used to work
in tugboats in New York?” “Well now, I don’t know about that.” “I guess you
only know him in the West.” “I reckon, I ain’t never been to New York.” “Well,
damn me, I’m amazed you know him. This is a big country. Yet I knew you
must have known him.” “Yessir, I know Big Slim pretty well. Always
generous with his money when he’s got some. Mean tough fellow, too; I
seen him flatten a police-man in the yards at Cheyenne, one punch.” That
sounded like Big Slim; he was always practicing that one punch in the
air; he looked like Jack Dempsey, but a young Jack Dempsey who drank.
“Damn!” I yelled into the wind, and I had another shot, and by now I was
feeling pretty good. Every shot was wiped away by the rushing wind of
the open truck, wiped away of its bad effects and the good effect sank
in my stomach. “Cheyenne, here I come!” I sang. “Denver, look out for
your boy.” Montana Slim turned to me, pointed at my shoes, and commented
“You reckon if you put
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