He was by now telling this to Orcutt, directing...
He was by now telling this to Orcutt, directing his remarks solely at himAs though, despite the evidence of the drunken woman Lou Levov was sitting next to, despite the incontrovertible evidence of so much of Jewish lore, the anarchy of a highborn Gentile remained essentially unimaginable to him, and Orcutt, therefore, of everyone at the table, could best appreciate the platitude he was getting atThey're supposed to be the dependable ones in control of themselvesAren't they? They marked the territoryDidn't they? They made the rules, the very rules that the rest of us who came here have agreed to followCould Orcutt fail to admire him for sitting in that kitchen, sitting there patiently playing gin until at last the forces of good overcame the forces of evil and that dirty torebki louis vuitton movie went up in smoke back in 1935? "Well, I'm sorry to say, MrLevov, that you can't keep it out any longer just by playing cards," Orcutt told him"That was a way to keep it out that doesn't exist any longer "Keep what out?" Lou Levov asked "What you're talking about," said OrcuttAbnormality cloaked as ideologyThe perpetual protestTime was you could step away from it, you could make a stand against itAs you point out, you could even just play cards against itBut these days it's getting harder and harder to find reliefThe grotesque is supplanting everything commonplace that people love about this countryToday, to be what they call 'repressed' is a source of shame to people--as not to be repressed used to be "That is true, that is trueLet me tell you about Al omega automatic seamaster HabermanYou want to talk about the old-style world and what used to be, let's talk about AlA wonderful fella, Al, a handsome fellaGot rich cutting glovesYou could in those daysA husband and a wife who had any ambition could get a few skins and make some glovesEnded up in a small room, two men cutting, a couple of women sewing, they could make the gloves, they could press them and ship themThey made money, they were their own bosses, they could work sixty hours a weekWay, way back when Henry Ford was paying the unheard-of sum of a dollar a day, a fine table cutter would make five dollars a dayBut look, in those days it was nothing for an ordinary woman to own twenty, twenty-five pair of glovesA woman used to have a glove wardrobe, different gloves for every outfit--different colors, borse gucci different styles, different lengthsA woman wouldn't go outside without a pair in any weatherIn those days it wasn't unusual for a woman to spend two, three hours at the glove counter and try on thirty pair of gloves, and the lady behind the desk had a sink and she would wash her hands between each colorIn a fine ladies' glove, we had quarter sizes into the fours and up to eight and a halfGlove cutting is a wonderful trade--was, anywayEverything now is 'was' A cutter like Al always had a shirt and a tie onIn those days a cutter never worked without a shirt and a tieYou could work at seventy-five and eighty years old tooThey could start in the way Al did, at fifteen, or even younger, and they could go to eightySeventy was a spring chickenAnd they could work at their leisure, fake birkin Saturday and SundayThese people could work constantlyMoney to send their kids to schoolMoney to fix up their homes nicelyAl could take a piece of leather, say to me, for a gag, 'What do you want, Lou, eight and nine-sixteenths?' And just snip it off without a ruler, measuring it perfectly with just his eyeThe cutter was the prima donnaBut all that pride of craftsmanship is gone, of courseOf the actual table cutters who could cut a sixteen-button white glove, I think Al Haberman may have been the last guy in America who could do itThe long glove, of course, vanished' There was the eight-button glove which became very popular, silk-lined, but that was gone by '65We were already taking gloves that were longer, chopping off the tops, making shorties, and using the top to make another omega watch orange g