Gordon Lish
My wife and small son were away for the week, having removed  themselves from the day-to-day predicament for a brief travel to a place  of better weather.  I was fine the first night, and remained equally  fine the second and third, feeding myself from the cabinets and  cupboards and pantry and doing what seemed expectable in the way of  tidying up.  Yet each night I would put off my hour of retirement a  trifle longer than that which had found me seeking the sanctuary of my  bed the night previous—so that by the fourth night, it was virtually  daybreak when I sought the security of blankets and pillow.  Mind you, I  was not passing the sleepless hours in any particular fashion, aside  from the regularity of those few moments that saw to my nutrition and  the succeeding clean-up of the premises.  But I cannot tell you what  precisely I was doing, save that I think I spent the greater particle of  the time moving from room to room and regarding the objects that  adorned them.  At all events, it was during the course of the fifth  night of their absence—of my wife and small son, I mean—that I was  suddenly, in my meanderings, captured by the sense that I had happened  to come upon the thought of my lifetime.  It was while beholding the  seat of a wainscot chair of the Jacobean period, and while losing myself  in the patina my week-by-week waxing of its surface had achieved, that I  thought, “Why wax?”  I mean, it was utterly stupefying, this notion—Why  wax? Why, indeed, wax anything ever again, when one could instead  coat a surface with—ahh—shellac!          
 I was positively beside myself with excitement, gripped by a delirium of  a quality I am not competent to describe.  I remember thinking, “My   God, just look at me, an ordinary fellow abandoned by wife and child,  now exalted in his possession of a piece of the most exquisite  invention!”  I was quick to consider the punishing labors of all those  persons who, for years by the eras, had applied themselves to the rude  practice of spreading on and then of rubbing and buffing, this when one  layer of shellac could end such brutish industry forever. 
 I went first to the shelves that we used for the storage of all  flammables, took what I wanted in the way of a can and a brush, and then  made haste for my closet, there taking up the two pairs of shoes I then  owned and carrying them into the living room, stopping en route to  gather several sections of the Sunday paper from the stack it is our  habit to keep accumulating from Sunday to Sunday. 
 Oh, you goon!  Did you honestly think it was the furniture I meant to  have a go at?  Great heavens, no.  Shellac on wood has been done and  done—whereas who’d ever thought of shoes! 
 I arranged things.  
 I laid out paper.  
 I pried off the lid of the can. 
 I inspected the brush for dust, for hairs.  
 Have I said that wife and son are endowed with hair of the finest  filament?  In any case, I went to work, and left my efforts to dry,  sleeping more satisfactorily than it had been my fortune to do in years. 
 But when I returned from my office the following evening, both pairs of  shoes were still wet—two nights thereafter (I was appalled), they were  no drier.  It was only then that I realized I had been wearing galoshes. 
 I went at them with a razor blade, the shoes, scraping.  I scraped and  then I tried a solvent.  I admit it—this time I didn’t bother myself  with newspaper. I no longer liked the floor any better than I liked my  shoes. 
 I won’t make this last forever. 
 I murdered those shoes. 
 I hacked at them—I dug and delved at them, and stabbed and stabbed. 
 Towards dawn, I dumped them in the trash, and got out the vacuum cleaner  to suck up the shreds of leather.  But I could see  there was no  repairing the floor by such measure.  The solvent had eaten holes  through the varnish.  It was festered, the floor.  It was an  infestation. 
 I skipped my office after scrubbing off the stain on my hands.  I went  in galoshes straight to a shoe store, took a seat and stuck out a  galosh, said “Nine-and-a-half, E.  Give me a brogue.” 
 “You mean a blucher?” said the simp. 
 “That’s it,” I said.  “E. I’m wide.” 
 “In a jiffy,” he said, and the purchase was made, the whole ugly affair  accomplished in minutes. 
 I was fine.  All the way home, I was fine.  For the rest of the day I  ate biscuits and tidied and waxed those shoes.  It was not until the new  shoes seemed as shiny as they would get that I left off and squatted  there gazing at things, studying the chairs and the tables, all the  surviving surfaces that gleamed.  It was then that I was willing to  reckon with the rest of what I had said to that fop of theirs when he  had asked why in the world I was wearing galoshes now that the streets  were bare of snow. 
 Oh, listen to me listening to myself! 
 “Listen,” I said.  “I got this boy, God love him, he’s seven, and all he  wants to do is do for me.  So what happens?  So when I’m not looking,  what happens?  Listen,” I said, now and raising my voice for them in  that whole shoe store to hear, “that kid, that wonderful kid, he takes a  can of shellac to every last one of my shoes to put a lasting shine on  them!” 
 I even laughed when everybody laughed.   
 Do you understand what I am saying to you?   
 I winked my goddamn head off—me, a man.
