It was all
so right. It was all so wrong. And "interesting" definitely an understatement. And as someone who tends to be skeptical of emails from deposed Nigerian foreign ministers who want to wire millions to my bank account, and investment opportunities involving bridges to Brooklyn (or bitcoin artwork), I've decided to give up on the pursuit of this purportedly unsmoked seven-day, circa 1920, Dunhill set of "Billiards & Bulldogs" [sic] offered in an auction by a zero-feedback seller who opened his account a day before posting the auction, claiming to be based in Yonkers, NY.
Whatever else, the dozen pictures posted of seven pipes (four shells, three bruyeres--the largest a beautifully cut bent more than likely a model 56) perfectly fitted in a Dunhill "vintage" case with a white silk lining lacking the Prince of Wales ostrich feather, beg more than a few questions--in addition to the obvious threshold issue of cunning scam or bizarrely incurious real seller.
My own first question was whether this was a known set? One that a someone here among the Duke Street irregulars has seen before. One clue--worthy of Agatha Christie--is a half open, apparently unused envelope laid on the open case with Harry Rosenthal and a Manhattan 10021 return address engraved on the rear flap.
Thoughts, Gentlemen?
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