This chapter's epigraph comes from a famous poem by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, which begins, "I am a poet, a poet's son." It is a poem in which the poet asks, "How can I deal with a soaring eagle?" . The poem's title, however, is "How Can I Deal with a Flying Eagle?" The poem is a response to the question, "What can he do with a simple fist technique?" This question is answered by the answer, "He's going to lose this round." The poem then proceeds to explain that the "simple fist technique" is not enough to
This chapter's epigraph comes from a famous poem by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, which begins, "I am a poet, a poet's son." It is a poem in which the poet asks, "How can I deal with a soaring eagle?" . The poem's title, however, is "How Can I Deal with a Flying Eagle?" The poem is a response to the question, "What can he do with a simple fist technique?" This question is answered by the answer, "He's going to lose this round." The poem then proceeds to explain that the "simple fist technique" is not enough to