Robert Browning wears a twat on his head

WickedEve

save an apple, eat eve
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From dictionary.com:

The T-word occupies a special niche in literary history, however, thanks to a horrible mistake by Robert Browning, who included it in 'Pippa Passes' (1841) without knowing its true meaning. 'The owls and bats,/Cowls and twats,/Monks and nuns,/In a cloister's moods.' Poor Robert! He had been misled into thinking the word meant 'hat' by its appearance in 'Vanity of Vanities,' a poem of 1660, containing the treacherous lines: 'They'd talk't of his having a Cardinalls Hat,/They'd send him as soon an Old Nuns Twat.' (There is a lesson here about not using words unless one is very sure of their meaning.) [Hugh Rawson, "Wicked Words," 1989]
 
I thought I'd learn nothing today

Wicked, I read your poetry back in the day and never understood half the words.
You have made me pull out the big book of words again.......there ain't nothing about hats under the twat, but I already knew that. You read strange stuff. ;)
 
Although, cowls and twats in their rolled folds around an opening... well, you can visualize that yourselves, I'm sure.
 

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