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WHEN A WOMAN FANCIES.

"Yes, it's a poor car," said my friend apologetically. "Yon see, my wife bought it. She fancied it." The emphasis of those last three words told the whole story—his annoyance, his despair, his martyrdom. A husband's continual fear is that his wife without warning will buy "something she fancies," regardless of its practical worth. To tell her that he could have bought the thing "twice as good at half the price" merely amuses her. For a woman realises the sheer ecstasy of obeying Fancy's impulse. This delight, in her eyes, compensates for any material loss or disadvantage that may be necessary. Her husband's solemn, almost painful, inspection of catalogues to find the best and cheapest lawnmower is exasperating to her. If the money must be spent, she argues, why not enjoy spending if. This illustrates -a marked difference between the sexes. To a man, the value of possession is what matters most; but to a woman, the joy of selecting is the supreme attraction. Her zest for Fancy makes a woman in many ways more "sporting" than a man. the little excitement of "fancying" a colour or a crew in the Oxford and Cambridge boat race is an unalloyed delight, whether her side wins or not. Similarly, she will back a horse regardless of form or betting odds. Her ideas of finding the winner may be unmethodical, impulsive and reckless; but the point is that they make her far happier than is the sporting gentleman who religiously studies the whole history of the turf before he lays out a penny. Moreover, it is a mistake to confuse a woman's fancifulness with her fickleness. For a woman is always very loyal to her "fancies," Over those srosll things as she calls them, she feels that her whims have every right to be indulged. Whatever may be the results, and whatever her head may afterwards tell her, she retains all faith in the-choice-other heart.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZH19260126.2.7.2

Bibliographic details

New Zealand Herald, Volume LXIII, Issue 19235, 26 January 1926, Page 5

Word Count
326

WHEN A WOMAN FANCIES. New Zealand Herald, Volume LXIII, Issue 19235, 26 January 1926, Page 5

WHEN A WOMAN FANCIES. New Zealand Herald, Volume LXIII, Issue 19235, 26 January 1926, Page 5