Interesting book, but all his talk about health and longevity didn't help him much. He died in his early fifties.
I laughed when reading his chapter on self defense.. " pulling your opponent's jacket sleeves down over his arms."
I believe Fitz died during an influenza epidemic that killed millions worldwide. Nothing to do with not being healthy.
This was interesting. In guarding always keep your elbows close to your sides. This takes in the benefit of i the forearm, and if the glove be held close to the face all that side of the body is protected. Never land a punch without having the block ( 95 ) SELF*DEFENSE ready to meet the counter. Every time you start a punch remember that your opponent intends to come back with another punch. The particular art of the game is to land a blow without a return; but every time you make an attack you render yourself liable to an offensive demonstration from the man with whom you are sparring. One of the best uses of the hands in boxing is not to use them. When a blow is struck the proper way to avoid it is not to stop it with the hand or forearm, but to “slip” it. By “slip* ping” a blow, I mean that you should get away from it in such a manner that no part of your opponent’s arm touches you. This is known as “ducking” and “side*stepping.” For instance, if your sparring partner swings his right for the side of your face, lower your head and let the blow go over. Do not “duck” in toward him. Let your head go under the blow and away from it to the side. This prevents your opponent from landing an upper*cut, which he would do if you were close enough to him.
I did some research since. No, the influenza epidemic came after Fitzs' death. He died in 1917, the Spanish Flu hit in 1918.
This content is protected IN my first lesson on boxing I told you how to use your feet. Now, we will suppose you have learned that correctly, and we will go to the next lesson : how to hold the body. The body of a boy or a man is the boiler. It is from there that all the steam comes that moves the machinery, the arms and legs. No matter how big and strong the arms and legs are, they will not be able to do anything unless the body gives them the power. So you see how much care you should take of the body. There is no exercise that will do so much to make the body strong and healthy and full of steam as boxing. Care must be observed not to do anything to offset the benefit of the exercise, such as smoking cigarettes or chewing tobacco. As for drinking beer or spirits, no one of commonsense will do that. Then, when the body is clean and full of vitality, there is always a feeling of cheerfulness and goodnature. There is no desire to be quarrelsome. No one should learn to box so that he may bully it over others, but that he can defend himself from attack, and for the health and strength that the exercise gives. Wrong Beginning It is natural for the American boy to box. He picks up a bit of the art himself in sparring with his playmates. But the trouble with this is that he is likely to begin all wrong, and then he has to unlearn all he knows before he can learn the right way. Quite recently I saw a case in point: two boys, without the knowledge, attempting to box. The way they held the body, feet, and hands was all wrong. The style of one boy was worse than that of the other. He held his body away back. A gentle push would have taken him off his feet. He had no brace with the body to back up the force of his own blow or to stand against that of his playmate. The other boy was not so bad, but his muscles were too stiff and his shoulders too square. Neither of the boys could move about quickly and easily. They were not supple or graceful. They did not have that sure movement of the body which gives to it so much health. Movement is fuel to the body. Where there is plenty of fuel there is plenty of steam. In taking your stand for a bout with the gloves, let the body lean a little bit forward from the hips. Have all the muscles loose. Put the left side forward. Do not stand with your body square to your opponent: it gives him a wider target to hit and does not allow you the swing of the body and shoulders which you need in order to strike a good blow. Hold your shoulders down, the left one particularly. This gives you length of reach and ease of arm movement. Keep your left arm out, but not straight. Always have your elbows bent a little. A perfectly straight arm is easily hurt. If the arm is bent a little at the elbow it gives it strength and quickness of action. Swing your body with the waist as a pivot. Do not have it set; that is, held rigid. Always keep it swinging, not so hard as to tire you, but so that it is ever ready to start in any direction. The body can start much quicker if it be moving than if it be still. Getting Away from Attack A boxer with his shoulders about his ears and his body held rigid cannot move quickly. When you jump back from an attack do not alter the position of your body; in other words, go back with the body held in the same manner as when you began to spar. The reason for this is, that when you land away, on your feet, you are still in a position for either attack or defense should your opponent follow you. The man who would evade an onslaught by thrusting back his head and body so that he is almost falling backward is all wrong. His adversary could follow the attack and easily have the backward man at his mercy. Fill the Lungs. When boxing, keep your stomach in and your chest out; not stiffly, but naturally. It may be awkward at first, but you will soon l learn how easy it is and wonder how you ever stood any other way.By keeping the stomach in and the chest full of air you enjoy all the lung strengthening benefits of boxing and keep the stomach out of harms way. That part of the body is always a point of attack and should be protected. I will next tell how to hold the hands while boxing.
This content is protected IN my last chapter I told how to hold the body while boxing. The position of the body plays a most important part in the art of self defense. Now, that you have learned the correct way of holding the body, I shall tell you how to hold the hands. In boxing never have the muscles set and tense. Always have all the muscles of the arms and body and legs loose and ready for action. Hold your hands open. Never close your fist, except at the moment when you land a blow. The reason for this is plain: holding your fist closed strains the muscles of the forearm and uses up a certain part of your strength unnecessarily. Always remember that you should never use any physical force until the moment arrives when you need it. Do not have your muscles strained and rigid. Keep everything loose. It is easy to do so, and the best exhibition always comes from a man who is not musclebound. In landing a blow remember this particular piece of advice: never hit with the thumb. Always keep the thumb up, and when you land a punch have the impact and your opponents head in such relation that your hand will not be injured; that is, use the first two knuckles of the hand. In hitting a blow never close the hand until the blow is landed. The reason for this is that it strains the muscles of the forearm and tires the boxer needlessly. Holding the hands open not only relieves the muscles from any unnecessary strain, but keeps a wider space of glove always ready to defend from attack. Now, in stopping a blow there is a wrong and a right way. Always turn the palm of the glove outward in stopping a blow. Keep the hand open. This presents a larger surface to the glove of your opponent and will do more to prevent his blow from landing than if your fist was closed. In guarding always keep your elbows close to your sides. This takes in the benefit of i the forearm, and if the glove be held close to the face all that side of the body is protected. Never land a punch without having the block ready to meet the counter. Every time you start a punch remember that your opponent intends to come back with another punch. The particular art of the game is to land a blow without a return; but every time you make an attack you render yourself liable to an offensive demonstration from the man with whom you are sparring. One of the best uses of the hands in boxing is not to use them. When a blow is struck the proper way to avoid it is not to stop it with the hand or forearm, but to slip it. By slipping a blow, I mean that you should get away from it in such a manner that no part of your opponents arm touches you. This is known as ducking and sidestepping. For instance, if your sparring partner swings his right for the side of your face, lower your head and let the blow go over. Do not duck in toward him. Let your head go under the blow and away from it to the side. This prevents your opponent from landing an uppercut, which he would do if you were close enough to him. Always remember that the hands are a most important factor in boxing. Never land a blow that will hurt the hands. When you lead a straight punch, keep the thumb up. When you swing, always keep the knuckles up. A blow is landed with the first two knuckles of the hand. There is another thing to tell a young man if he wants to succeed in boxing: Take your chance when you see it, and hit from where your hand is. Why do I win fights? Because I see the chance when it comes, and I take it. Every little while a man leaves himself open, but it is only for a secondit is not even a second, it is less than the tenth part of a second. You must seize that chance and strike the instant you see the opening. The foolish fighter draws back his hand to hit harder, but by the time he has drawn his arm back the man has protected himself, and the chance is gone. What I say to young men, and what I say to everybody, is this: Do just what I do. If you want to make a success in life, always hit when you see the chance; do not draw your arm back; hit from where your hand is, and you have got him. That is my motto. It is no trouble to whip your opponent when you use that.
This content is protected HAVING learned how to use the feet, hands, and body, I will now explain how some of the blows used in boxing are struck. I will not show you all the blows in this lesson. It would take more than a chapter to show them all. You have not forgotten that the feet must be held apart, with the left leg before the right and the left knee bent a little. Also, that the weight of the body rests on the right leg. You remember what I told you about keeping the muscles free and easy, and not held stiffly. All this is important in striking a blow. It is not only the hand and arm that are used in striking; the legs, body, and shoulders also come into play. There used to be an old idea of striking with the arm working like the piston-rod of an engine. In storybooks the hero always knocks down the villain with a blow straight from the shoulder. That is all changed now. A blow to have force must have the "send" of the legs and the swing of the body with it. A straight blow has not the telling force of a swing. This is because the swing has all the weight of the body behind it. A Simple Blow An important blow is the straight left lead for the face. It is a simple blow and easily landed. But it is not one of the hard raps in boxing. To deliver a straight left lead watch your chance when the other has his guard low. Step in quickly. Swing the left shoulder forward from the hip, at the same time sending the arm out in a straight line. As the arm goes out shut the fist. Keep the palm of the hand turned inward and partly downward so that the top knuckles will strike. While you are striking you must not forget that your opponent may strike you at the same time. Therefore, you must learn how to prevent him. I will tell you how to do this in a future lesson. Will Confuse a Boxer, The straight lead has many uses. It will confuse a boxer so that he cannot tell what to do. A good time to send in this blow is when your opponent starts a swing at you. A straight lead in the face will stop many a hard swing before it can land. It will also go through an open guard when a swing would be warded off. The best time to send in a straight blow is when your opponent is coming toward you. This lends added force to the stroke. Beside, it may stop the others rush. In landing this blow I told you to send the arm out in a straight line. I do not mean that you should straighten the arm entirely. Have the elbow bent a little, as this prevents a strain at this point. If the arm be straightened out there may be a snap at the elbow, and an injury there is almost impossible to cure. Always be careful not to injure your arms or hands when striking. It sometimes happens that a blow does more harm to the boxer who delivers it than to the one who receives it. A straight right lead is like one with the left hand, only, of course, the right is used. In this lead the right leg is brought a little forward, adding its swing to the force of the blow. This stroke is not so often used as the left lead.The reason for this is that the right glove is so much further away from its intended mark. Then, again, the right arm is used more for a guard and for heavy swinging. Now we come to the swing. One of the Best Blows The right hand swing, when rightly delivered, is one of the best blows in boxing. It is hard to land, as it travels in a half circle and has a long distance to go. This makes it easy to avoid or stop. In landing this punch wait until you get your opponents guard low. You can do this by making believe to hit him in the body. Then, when you think you have the opening, drop your right hand down and back with the elbow bent so that the forearm and upper arm are almost at right angles. From this position throw your arm in a half circle up and over to the side of your opponents head. Close your fist while the blow is travelling. Keep the palm of the glove up and down in a line with the body. As the blow starts swing the right leg and all the right side of the body with it. Just as it is landing stiffen the armand push the shoulder forward, turning the body at the hips. The force of the blow should not be ended the moment it lands. Keep it going: it will have more effect that way. The first two knuckles of the hand should land the blow. If you throw your palm down and hit with the thumb you are liable to break it even with the protection of a glove. The left swing is made with the left hand in the same manner as the right swing, only the position of the legs is not changed. It does not have as much force as the right swing, because it does not get a like shift of the body with it. But it is easier to land, as it travels a shorter distance.
This content is protected Lack of Self confidence Often Contributes to the Defeat of a Good Fighter THIS is a lesson on courage. There is no trait of character which a boxer needs more than this. Courage of the highest ordernot only physically, but morallyis essential to success as a pugilist. I say as a pugilist, because it is in that direction that my experience lies. However, I have learned that this question of moral as well as physical courage is really the keynote to success. There never was a boxing champion, or a champion, in fact, in any line of sports, who was a coward. They have all been fearless, and in nearly every instance morally superior men. Their sense of right and wrong has been as keenly developed as has their physical superiority. They have not only felt their power of mastery over their less fortunate fellowmen, but they have been possessed of the moral courage that comes with the knowledge of right. It is courage that tells in every walk of life. This it is that leads the gallant soldier to victory; that carries the stouthearted cycle champion under the wire. a winner. The courageous man knows not the word failure. His password is victory, and his golden rule reads, Be sure you are right, then go ahead. The boy who is learning to box must be courageous. He must not know the word fear. It is not physical strength, or even the cleverness that comes to an expert boxer, that wins battles. It is moral courage. If a boxer be ever so clever, be he ever so strong, he cannot win battles unless he is courageous. And he cannot be courageous unless he has the moral strength of right. Take Right and pit it against Might, and in nine instances out of ten Right will score the victory. So be sure you are right before you go ahead. Another element that contributes largely to the success of a boxer is self confidence. If a man is not self confident he cannot hope to win battles. I have noticed in my experience in the ring how often a boxer will be defeated simply owing to lack of self confidence. Men whom I have met and defeated in a round or two have gone out a few weeks or months later and put up wonderful fights. Won in Other Battles These men have taken blows and received punishment which I never dreamed of inflicting upon them, and come out of those battles victorious. In their contests with me they simply lacked confidence. I had gained a reputation as a hard hitter and winner of battles, and it was therefore lack of moral self reliance that defeated these men as soon as landed a few blows. The blows I gave them had neither the speed nor the force of those which the same men took unflinchingly from men of no reputation. Therefore, do not forget that you must be morally courageous before you can hope to win battles in the struggle of life. There is no better moral in the world to follow than this, Be sure you are right, then go ahead.