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Debutante Bouquets: Their Uses and
Abuses 1884 A young and pretty debutante, with a rich papa
who owns an opera box and is fond of entertaining,
does not like to refuse to carry to balls the
bouquets that have been sent her by admiring dudes
and dudelettes, and if she did it would cause quite
as "great sensation in society as if one of its fair
daughters should elope with her groom. A reform is the only means of meeting the
exigencies of the situation, and several very
prominent ladies in the fashionable world both
married and single, intend to take a very decided
position: this Winter in regard to carrying flowers
at the balls. It frequently occurs that many ladies
in a ball carry eight and nine bouquets, and as many
as 18 bouquets have been sent to one young lady, who
has taken them all with her to a following ball. It
is now pretty generally decided that the older girls
will not carry any flowers this Winter, but this
decision may be modified at the discretion of any of
the ladies in respect to the one bouquet that is
sent to each of them by their partner for the
cotillion. If he has been presented by an acquaintance of her own standing, possibly by a friend, and she would not accept his flowers otherwise, she invites him to the opera or he is asked to one of her large dinners in return for his civilities. Of course he accepts all her preferred invitations, and in this way is able to meet and talk with the very people he has exhausted every of her means of being introduced to for several years. Should any of these ladies take a liking to him, if he is at all clever or well gifted in the use of verbal confectionery he is asked to their houses in turn. By persistently pursuing this course he will soon find himself acknowledged to the "one of us" the mystic circle.
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