Saturday, November 22, 2025

MY MOUTON JACKET

 



A question on another blog: What did YOU covet in high school?

Beginning about the ninth grade, I coveted a Mouton Jacket---the softest, smoothest, dig-your-fingers-into-that-lush, cut pile garment that ever came off a sheep. They weren’t for school---oh, No. they were for church and special dates and other VERY special occasions, and I longed for one of those beautiful things for YEARS. Even the linings were slipper satin, a fabric reserved only for wedding dresses and the finest fur coats.

We'd sit in Sunday school or BTU, in the folding chairs ringed round the room, and nobody, no matter what the temperature, would take off their Mouton. Except maybe Karla Kay, who would casually shrug hers off over the back of the chair so her fancy embroidered monogram on the inside left would show to advantage. Hers was even richer with the redolence of her Daddy's cigars, which seemed to permeate their whole lives and lend an air of added elegance to the soft fur.

And I finally got one---Christmas of senior year---perfection, with my own initials in gold-outlined-in-red-satin-thread, right there inside on that smooth chocolate lining. I cannot tell you how luxurious it felt, that piece of sheepskin and satin, cut and sewn to fit. There was more magic in that fluffy garment than in a dozen glass slippers or invisibility cloaks. I felt beautiful---just showered and made up in the best Revlon and Woolworth’s had to offer, hair gleaming and eyes bright, looking and smelling marvelous, feeling the nervous, happy anticipation as a sweet succession of nice young men arrived at my door to escort me out for a lovely evening.


I wore it all through college, as well, and once, at a fraternity party, I got the wrong coat. My date George had handed it over at the little check-table, and in the flurry of all leaving-at-once to get back to the dorms for curfew, the young pledge handed me the wrong jacket.


George did the obligatory holding; I slipped into it and slid my hands into the pockets. The size was right, but It was like picking up the wrong baby---It was not mine. It didn’t hang right, my hands didn’t fit right, and it was just OFFF. I flipped back the left side---no initials. The coat-check guy headed for the big front windows, pointing to a brother holding the car-door for his date. “That must be it” he said. “It’s the only other one I handed out tonight.”


Old George ran for the door, with my little red pumps in twinkly pursuit---he flagged down the car, we ran up and explained things, and then he opened the car door.


The other girl feigned amazement that she might have on my coat, staying firmly seated, doing that hugging-shrugging motion that hugged it and herself, running her hands up the neckline and preening herself in it like a satisfied cat. She even pouted a little bit when she stepped out of the car. I reached and flipped the front to show my monogram, and she gave a resigned sigh as she took it off and handed it over.


SHE KNEW. And I knew she knew---she’d almost got away with my beautiful coat, and left behind a lesser version, thin and cheap as her intentions, with a stiff lining and no beautiful satin frog-loop at the waist. There was even the nasty scent of her Intimate cologne all around the neck fur, and I had to go sit up on the big old widow’s walk sunroof atop our dorm, with it blowing in the breeze two cold afternoons before the traces of that awful smell were gone.


I wore that coveted coat all through college, and its slightly-shopworn remains are in the guestroom closet upstairs, still in its Goldsmiths bag. It was the only thing I ever really aspired to HAVE in all my high school years, and it took three each of hopeful Christmases and birthdays before it finally appeared, for I was never one to press for anything. If my parents said, "No," it meant no. If they said, "We'll see," then you could live in hope, but you'd better not mention it again.


That gleaming lining is only a soft whisper now, but the initials still shine. I just go hug it sometimes, and I swear I can smell a long-ago spritz of Woodhue, and recapture the luxury of that young time---the evenings of a shining pony-tail  and bright eyes, of stepping out into a fun evening when all things were right, and a mere coat made my small, circumscribed World perfect.




6 comments:

  1. I love this story…is that sketch of you? Adorable. Thank you for sharing, Virginia

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    1. AWWWW, Virginia!! How sweet, and it's lovely to have you drop in. I hope you'll join us often. I'm glad you liked the little memory, and yes, that is me, at a carnival/festival or some such when I was in college. The guy did one as a caricature of me and my escort, with tiny bodies on water skis, and then just told me to stay there, so he could do a "real portrait." He just handed it to me with a smile and his card, and "NO CHARGE." It's funny how such little moments stick with you.

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  2. Darling Rachel,

    With this cold and bone-chilling weather now upon us, you really must go straight to that wardrobe and don your longed-for Mouton and wear it. If it were mine, then I would not be reserving it for any special occasion now, I should wear it indoors [especially with the cost of heating these days] indeed, I may even be tempted to wear it when first getting into bed. Yes, it really is this cold in Budapest.

    And, how clever of you to have monogrammed the Mouton otherwise it could be long gone by now. When we first came to Budapest, all public institutions had large notices which read "THE USE OF THE CLOAKROOM IS COMPULSORY". However, being British and being brought up never to part with items of any description, we firmly kept our coats on.....albeit that we nearly fainted from the heat as all these places are overheated.

    How beautifully you capture the scenes you describe here. We can smell the scents and imagine the characters as we too are transported back in time to days when appearance mattered so much more as one desperately tried to impress. How glorious, we think, it is to have reached an age when such things no longer concern us.

    We should love to know more about the pencil drawing which is truly delightful.

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  3. What a lovely letter to wake to this dampy-cold morning. It shall not daunt me, however---my compass is set on ALDI today and I shall not quail. The drawing was done at a carnival or some sort of come-to-town gathering the Summer I was nineteen---my escort and I had stood in line to have our caricatures, and the artist did one of us with tiny bodies on water-skis.

    Then he asked me to sit back down and did the profile one, and said "No Charge." It is on a brown stiff page almost like a grocery sack, and I've never framed it---I HATE the camera and any semblance of capturing my image---always have, and the story of a bride's brother tackling the photog who was heckling me with bulb-flashes as I was carrying lots of big trays and bowls at the reception is still going around the Country Club.

    The Jacket, alas, has seen so many better days; many stitches are frayed and cuffs releasing their pouf. It was a joy to every one of my babies to be put down on that squashy, cushy fur, and they'd roll around and bury their little faces in it. But somehow I can still ease my arms down into those slipper-satin sleeves, hug myself and close my eyes, and inhale the Woodhue memory of that glorious fulfilled dream of such a luxurious possession.

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    1. Now, come along, darling R, that pencil drawing deserves to be mounted and framed. It is a tender portrait and such a lovely memento.

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