Bob, do you remember me?
I saw you about a million years ago in a club on Wells
Street in Chicago. Maybe 1962 or 1963. I think it was the Earl of Old Town, but
I'm not so sure anymore. My memory stinks. I was like 15, now I'm not.
I remember it was a snowy night, a blizzard wind had
stopped all the buses, but I wanted to see you bad. So I walked to the club
down North Avenue. About 2 miles through the snow from my house. Sometimes the
sidewalks were so jammed up with snow I had to walk in the street.
You sang Don't Think Twice and Blowing in the Wind even
though there weren't too many of us in the club that night. Just a handful. A
lot of cars weren't getting through either.
I remember you joking about how we would all have to
spend the night and cuddle up together because the snow outside was saying,
ain't nobody going nowhere. We laughed and said we were ready.
I remember the last song you sang. The Walls of Red Wing.
You wanted to sing something about Minnesota, wanted to remember the winters
there.
I remember we all joined in on the chorus, all five of
us, and then I went out into the snow and began the long walk home humming your
songs and thinking about how someday I'd maybe grow up to be a lawyer or such,
or maybe I'd end up inside the walls of the prison at Red Wing.
Yours,
John Guzlowski
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