The Nineteenth Hat
Book Excerpt
She sniffed at most of the hats. But one of them, of green straw, with a large curving green wing on either side of the crown, and a few odd bits of fluffiness here and there, pleased her. It was Parisian. She had been to Paris--once. An "after-season" sale at a little shop in Torquay would not, perhaps, seem the most likely place in the world to obtain a chic hat; it is, moreover, a notorious fact that really chic hats cannot be got for less than three pounds, and this hat was marked ten shillings. Nevertheless, hats are most mysterious things. Their quality of being chic is more often the fruit of chance than of design, particularly in England. You never know when nor where you may light on a good hat. Vera considered that she had lighted on one.
"They're probably duck's feathers dyed," she said to herself. "But it's a darling of a hat and will suit me to
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Taken from 'McClure's Magazine' Volume 35, May - October, 1910
Plot bullets
His wife wants another hat.
There is a time when a man must put his foot down.
Why is the nineteenth hat, that time?
Well, he said the eighteenth was the last.
Money is not the object. It's the principal of the thing.
The time honored struggle between husband and wife begins.
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