Dear Frau Professor,
It was wholly a pleasure to hear from another shoemaker's child with an
immigrant background, and to learn that a column about my father had struck
"a personal note with me, having been raised by a shoemaker in Germany. Your
article describes my old man par excellence, who now in his mid-70s and
officially retired from his shop in a small town near Duesseldorf still
repairs shoes for his customers."
Why, sure. Good shoemakers grow rarer and rarer, and those who have found
one are well advised to stick with him - even though he claims to be
retired. Just hand him a pair of shoes in need of heels-and-a-half-sole, and
he won't be able to resist making them presentable again. It's a matter of
pride.
Now on to your question: Is there is an English equivalent for the German
phrase, zusammen schustern? You tell me it is used to
describe slapdash work. As an equivalent, I'd suggest the English phrase,
"cobbled together." I'd bet other languages have similar phrases, shoes
being as ubiquitous in human cultures as feet.
The phrase may be a libel on cobblers of all nationalities, but one can
understand how it came about: Cobbling can have the look of a make-do art,
especially in cases where some emergency treatment is needed for a floppy
sole or a broken heel, or if the customer can afford only half-soles or
heels but not both.
I've seen my father study and study a pair of muddy old boots some poor
sharecropper had brought in hoping against hope to save them for one more
season. Finally, like a surgeon talking to the family in the waiting room,
he would deliver his verdict - good, bad, or We'll Give It a Try.
The old man would take me with him some Sundays when he'd drive all over the
Ark-La-Tex - to little towns like Longview and Tyler and Lufkin in East
Texas, or to Ruston and Minden in the other direction, or up to Magnolia
despite the condition of Arkansas roads back then.
The trunk and back seat of the old Chevy would be packed tight with
just-fixed shoes. He'd show them to fellow members of the guild as samples
of what he could provide if they were interested. And they were. Because
there was a war on, and it took ration stamps to buy a pair of new shoes -
but not second-hand ones. It was a sellers' market.
There was a Walt Disney comic circa 1944 that had Donald Duck on the cover
in a cat costume; Donald was sitting on a backyard fence in the middle of
the night and howling - so the neighbors would throw their shoes at him. He
was collecting them for resale in a box labeled: SECOND HAND SHOES - NO
RATION POINTS. Nobody had to explain that cartoon to me.
I grew up playing in huge mounds of old shoes waiting for my father and his
crew to fix and sell. Other kids may have grown up with Dick and Jane and
Spot; my early childhood vocabulary included Cat's Paw and uppers.
The golden age of the second-hand shoe business ended with the post-war
flood of cheap imports. My father's trade was one of the first casualties of
what we now call globalization. Who'd fix a pair of shoes when it was
cheaper to buy new ones?
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