Chap.

 1        2|    mania for doing up all her hats afresh; she alone knew what
 2        5|      the outlines of battered hats and worn–out shawls were
 3        8| entered, wearing one of those hats of which she alone understood
 4        8|  faded dresses and lamentable hats contrasted strangely with
 5       10|      Here men’s overcoats and hats were always in evidence,
 6       10|      her extravagantly quaint hats, and would return at night
 7       11|     tumult, a mob, an eddy of hats, surged round the several
 8       11|  nervous laughter threw their hats in the air. And from the
 9       11|      beneath the sea of black hats. By and by, when this crowd
10       13|     copied the fashion of her hats. Sometimes her landau, in
11       14|     the pavement, innumerable hats apparently drifting on their
12       14|      All the others had their hats and gloves on and looked
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