The Death of Benny Paret
—Norman Mailer
Paret was a Cuban, a proud club
fighter who had become welterweight champion because of his unusual ability to
take a punch. His style of fighting was to take three punches to the head in
order to give back two. At the end of ten rounds, he would still be bouncing,
his opponent would have a headache. But in the last two years, over the
fifteen-round fights, he had started to take some bad maulings.
This fight had its turns. Griffith won most of
the early rounds, but Paret knocked Griffith
down in the sixth. Griffith
had trouble getting up, but made it, came alive and was dominating Paret again
before the round was over. Then Paret began to wilt. In the middle of the
eighth round, after a clubbing punch had turned his back to Griffith, Paret walked three disgusted steps
away, showing his hindquarters. For a champion, he took much too long to turn
back around. It was the first hint of weakness Paret had ever shown, and it
must have inspired a particular shame, because he fought the rest of the fight
as if he were seeking to demonstrate that he could take more punishment than
any man alive. In the twelfth, Griffith
caught him. Paret got trapped in a corner. Trying to duck away, his left arm
and his head became tangled on the wrong side of the top rope. Griffith was in like a cat ready to rip the
life out of a huge boxed rat. He hit him eighteen right hands in a row, an act
which took perhaps three or four seconds, Griffith making a pent-up whimpering
sound all the while he attacked, the right hand whipping like a piston rod
which has broken through the crankcase, or like a baseball bat demolishing a
pumpkin. I was sitting in the second row of that corner—they were not ten feet
away from me, and like everybody else, I was hypnotized. I had never seen one
man hit another so hard and so many times. Over the referee’s face came a look
of woe as if some spasm had passed its way through him, and then he leaped on Griffith to pull him
away. It was the act of a brave man. Griffith
was uncontrollable. His trainer leaped into the ring, his manager, his cut man,
there were four people holding Griffith,
but he was off on an orgy, he had left the Garden, he was back on a hoodlum’s
street. If he had been able to break loose from his handlers and the referee,
he would have jumped Paret to the floor and whaled on him there.
And Paret? Paret died on his feet. As he took those eighteen punches something
happened to everyone who was in psychic range of the event. Some part of his
death reached out to us. One felt it hover in the air. He was still standing in
the ropes, trapped as he had been before, he gave some little half-smile of
regret, as if he were saying, “I didn’t know I was going to die just yet,” and
then, his head leaning back but still erect, his death came to breathe about
him. He began to pass away. As he passed, so his limbs descended beneath him,
and he sank slowly to the floor. He went down more slowly than any fighter had
ever gone down, he went down like a large ship which turns on end and slides
second by second into its grave. As he went down, the sound of Griffith’s
punches echoed in the mind like a heavy ax in the distance chopping into a wet
log.