Authors: Editors of Reader's Digest
Almost no one is foolish enough to imagine that he automatically deserves great success in any field of activity; yet almost everyone believes that he automatically deserves success in marriage.
â
S
YDNEY
J
.
H
ARRIS
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Marriage has teeth, and him bite very hot.
â
J
AMAICAN PROVERB
Â
Getting married is easy. Staying married is more difficult. Staying happily married for a lifetime should rank among the fine arts.
â
R
OBERTA
F
LACK
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Marriage is like vitamins: we supplement each other's minimum daily requirements.
â
K
ATHY
M
OHNKE
Â
Never marry for money. Ye'll borrow it cheaper.
â
S
COTTISH PROVERB
Â
A wedding anniversary is the celebration of love, trust, partnership, tolerance and tenacity. The order varies for any given year.
â
P
AUL
S
WEENEY
Â
A good marriage is like an incredible retirement fund. You put everything you have into it during your productive life, and over the years it turns from silver to gold to platinum.
â
W
ILLARD
S
COTT
The Joy of Living
Â
In every marriage more than a week old, there are grounds for divorce. The trick is to find, and continue to find, grounds for marriage.
â
R
OBERT
A
NDERSON
Solitaire & Double Solitaire
Â
If you made a list of reasons why any couple got married, and another list of the reasons for their divorce, you'd have a lot of overlapping.
â
M
IGNON
M
C
L
AUGHLIN
Â
The concept of two people living together for 25 years without a serious dispute suggests a lack of spirit only to be admired in sheep.
â
A
.
P
.
H
ERBERT
Â
Story writers say that love is concerned only with young people, and the excitement and glamour of romance end at the altar. How blind they are. The best romance is inside marriage; the finest love stories come after the wedding, not before.
â
I
RVING
S
TONE
Â
It takes a loose rein to keep a marriage tight.
â
J
OHN
S
TEVENSON
Â
The great thing about marriage is that it enables one to be alone without feeling loneliness.
â
G
ERALD
B
RENAN
Thoughts in a Dry Season
Â
A happy marriage is the world's best bargain.
â
O
.
A
.
B
ATTISTA
Â
Marrying for love may be a bit risky, but it is so honest that God can't help but smile on it.
â
J
OSH
B
ILLINGS
Â
The particular charm of marriage is the duologue, the permanent conversation between two people who talk over everything and everyone.
â
C
YRIL
C
ONNOLLY
The Unquiet Grave
Â
In marriage, being the right person is as important as finding the right person.
â
W
ILBERT
D
ONALD
G
OUGH
Â
In a successful marriage, there is no such thing as one's way. There is only the way of both, only the bumpy, dusty, difficult, but always mutual path.
â
P
HYLLIS
M
C
G
INLEY
The Province of the Heart
Â
Chains do not hold a marriage together. It is threads, hundreds of tiny threads, which sew people together through the years.
â
S
IMONE
S
IGNORET
Â
All that a husband or wife really wants is to be pitied a little, praised a little, appreciated a little.
â
O
LIVER
G
OLDSMITH
Â
Marriage should, I think, always be a little hard and new and strange. It should be breaking your shell and going into another world, and a bigger one.
â
A
NNE
M
ORROW
L
INDBERGH
Â
A happy marriage is a long conversation that always seems too short.
â
A
NDRÃ
M
AUROIS
Memoires
Â
The difference between courtship and marriage is the difference between the pictures in a seed catalogue and what comes up.
â
J
AMES
W
HARTON
Â
The greatest of all arts is the art of living together.
â
W
ILLIAM
L
YON
P
HELPS
Marriage
Â
A sound marriage is not based on complete frankness; it is based on a sensible reticence.
â
M
ORRIS
L
.
E
RNST
Â
A successful marriage requires falling in love many times, always with the same person.
â
M
IGNON
M
C
L
AUGHLIN
in
The Atlantic
Â
You don't marry one person; you marry three: the person you think they are, the person they are, and the person they are going to become as the result of being married to you.
â
R
ICHARD
N
EEDHAM
You and All the Rest
Â
Marriage is like twirling a baton, turning handsprings or eating with chopsticks. It looks easy until you try it.
â
H
ELEN
R
OWLAND
Â
The goal in marriage is not to think alike, but to think together.
â
R
OBERT
C
.
D
ODDS
Â
Married life teaches one invaluable lesson: to think of things far enough ahead not to say them.
â
J
EFFERSON
M
ACHAMER
Â
The marriages we regard as the happiest are those in which each of the partners believes that he or she got the best of it.
â
S
YDNEY
J
.
H
ARRIS
Â
Matrimony is the only game of chance the clergy favor.
â
E
MILY
F
ERGUSON
M
URPHY
Â
Nobody will ever win the battle of the sexes. There's too much fraternizing with the enemy.
â
H
ENRY
K
ISSINGER
Â
T
HE
GREAT GIFT OF FAMILY LIFEÂ
. . .
Â
The great gift of family life is to be intimately acquainted with people you might never even introduce yourself to, had life not done it for you.
â
K
ENDALL
H
AILEY
The Day I Became an Autodidact
Â
A family vacation is one where you arrive with five bags, four kids and seven I-thought-you-packed-its.
â
I
VERN
B
ALL
Â
Family faces are magic mirrors. Looking at people who belong to us, we see the past, present and future. We make discoveries about ourselves.
â
G
AIL
L
UMET
B
UCKLEY
The Hornes: An American Family
Â
Parentage is a very important profession; but no test of fitness for it is ever imposed in the interest of the children.
â
B
ERNARD
S
HAW
Everybody's Political What's What?
Â
A happy family is but an earlier heaven.
â
J
OHN
B
OWRING
Â
Other things may change us, but we start and end with family.
â
A
NTHONY
B
RANDT
in
Esquire
Â
No matter how many communes anybody invents, the family always creeps back.
â
M
ARGARET
M
EAD
Â
Heredity is what sets the parents of a teenager wondering about each other.
â
L
AURENCE
J
.
P
ETER
Peter's Quotations
Â
Heredity is a splendid phenomenon that relieves us of responsibility for our shortcomings.
â
D
OUG
L
ARSON
Â
Adolescence is perhaps nature's way of preparing parents to welcome the empty nest.
â
K
AREN
S
AVAGE AND
P
ATRICIA
A
DAMS
The Good Stepmother
Â
Few things are more satisfying than seeing your children have teenagers of their own.
â
D
OUG
L
ARSON
Â
Even a family tree has to have some sap.
âLos Angeles Times Syndicate
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Oh, to be only half as wonderful as my child thought I was when he was small, and only half as stupid as my teenager now thinks I am.
â
R
EBECCA
R
ICHARDS
Â
We never know the love of the parent until we become parents ourselves.
â
H
ENRY
W
ARD
B
EECHER
Â
He that has no fools, knaves nor beggars in his family was begot by a flash of lightning.
â
T
HOMAS
F
ULLER
Â
If you don't believe in ghosts, you've never been to a family reunion.
â
A
SHLEIGH
B
RILLIANT
Â
Before most people start boasting about their family tree, they usually do a good pruning job.
â
O
.
A
.
B
ATTISTA
Â
There is no king who has not had a slave among his ancestors, and no slave who has not had a king among his.
â
H
ELEN
K
ELLER
Â
The family fireside is the best of schools.
â
A
RNOLD
H
.
G
LASOW
Â
Making the decision to have a childâit's momentous. It is to decide forever to have your heart go walking around outside your body.
â
E
LIZABETH
S
TONE
Â
When you are a mother, you are never really alone in your thoughts. A mother always has to think twice, once for herself and once for her child.
â
S
OPHIA
L
OREN
Women and Beauty
Â
Mothers are the most instinctive philosophers.
â
H
ARRIET
B
EECHER
S
TOWE
Â
Instant availability without continuous presence is probably the best role a mother can play.
â
L
OTTE
B
AILYN
The Woman in America
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The three most beautiful sights: a potato garden in bloom, a ship in sail, a woman after the birth of her child.
â
I
RISH PROVERB
Â
Every parent is at some time the father of the unreturned prodigal, with nothing to do but keep his house open to hope.
â
J
OHN
C
IARDI
Â
You never get over being a child, long as you have a mother to go to.
â
S
ARAH
O
RNE
J
EWETT
Â
A good father is a little bit of a mother.
â
L
EE
S
ALK
Â
The most important thing a father can do for his children is to love their mother.
â
T
HEODORE
H
ESBURGH
Â
One father is more than a hundred schoolmasters.
â
G
EORGE
H
ERBERT
Â
My father didn't tell me how to live; he lived, and let me watch him do it.
â
C
LARENCE
B
UDINGTON
K
ELLAND
Â
You don't raise heroes; you raise sons. And if you treat them like sons, they'll turn out to be heroes, even if it's just in your own eyes.
â
W
ALTER
S
CHIRRA
S
R.
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The beauty of “spacing” children many years apart lies in the fact that parents have time to learn the mistakes that were made with the older onesâwhich permits them to make exactly the opposite mistakes with the younger ones.