Quotes &
Sayings About Marriage
The
kind of marriage you make depends upon the kind of person
you are. If you are a happy, well-adjusted person, the chances
are your marriage will be a happy one. If you have made
adjustments so far with more satisfaction than distress,
you are likely to make your marriage and family adjustments
satisfactorily. If you are discontented and bitter about
your lot in life, you will have to change before you can
expect to live happily ever after.
--Evelyn Duvall and Reuben Hill - - When You Marry
Marriage
-- as its veterans know well -- is the continuous process
of getting used to things you hadn't expected.
--Tom Mullen
The
middle years of marriage are the most crucial. In the early
years, spouses want each other and in late years, they need
each other.
--Rebecca Tilly
If
you want to sacrifice the admiration of many men for the
criticism of one, go ahead, get married.
--Katherine Hepburn
The
trouble with some women is that they get all excited about
nothing -- and then marry him.
--Cher
Happy
marriages begin when we marry the ones we love, and they
blossom when we love the ones we marry.
--Tom Mullen
"when
two people are under the influence of the most violent,
most insane, most delusive, and most transient of passions.
They are required to swear that they will remain in that
excited, abnormal, and exhausting condition continuously
until death do them part."
--George Bernard Shaw
From
Lee Daniel Quinn's book, Quinn's Devious Dictionary:
MARRIAGE, n.
[1] the dawn of romance and the commencement of history;
[2] a word that should be pronounced as "mirage";
[3] an event, for the upper middle class, is the only adventure
left;
[4] a very good way to promote civilization - if you get a good
wife you will be happy, if you get a bad one you will become
a philosopher {Socrates};
[5] a process much like a cafeteria - you carefully look over
the choices, select what looks the best - and pay later;
[6] an event which is called "tying the knot" - unfortunately,
the knot can be a noose;
[7] a word which always means commitment - but so does insanity;
[8] a ceremony favored in England - it's the only way to beat
their cold winters and lack of central heating;
[9] something that changes the demeanor of a driver - there
is no longer any effort needed to keep both hands on the wheel;
[10] the only permanent cure for love;
[11] is only compatible when the man makes a living and his
wife makes living worthwhile;
[12] the only adventure open to the cowardly;
[13] something which is called a feast - unfortunately, sometimes
the appetizer is better than the main course;
[14] a group which consists of: a master, a mistress, and two
slaves, making in all, two;
[15] the alliance of two people, one who never remembers birthdays,
and the other who never forgets them;
[16] the process that turns a female from an attraction into
a distraction;
[17] a legal custom which turns a man into the captive audience
of his wife;
[18] that ceremony which makes more strange bedfellows than
politics;
[19] a rite where two people, under the influence most violent,
most insane, most delusive, and most transient of passions,
are required to swear that they will remain in that excited,
abnormal and exhausting condition until death do them part;
[20] occurs where a man gets hooked by his own line;
[21] in America, is the only legal method of suppressing freedom
of speech;
[22] is made out of two toothbrushes but a single tube of toothpaste;
[23] is just a three-ring circus: engagement, wedding, and suffer;
[24] the process of finding out the kind of guy your wife would
have preferred;
[25] a condition where no wife gets what she expected, and no
husband expected what he was getting;
[26] the ceremony which provides a man with something that,
sooner or later, he will find he can't blame on the government;
[27] a tradition which would suffer considerably if men had
to pay the minister the same fee they will eventually have to
pay the divorce lawyer;
[28] is much like a pair of shears, so joined so the parts cannot
be separated, often moving in opposite directions, yet always
punishing anyone who tries to come between them;
[29] the continuous process of getting used to things you never
expected;
[30] a status which depends upon two to be successful but only
one to turn into a failure;
[31] is a book in which the first chapter is written in poetry
and the rest of the pages is prose;
[32] a bargain, and a sensible person understands that someone
must get the better of any bargain;
[33] in Japanese is called "Judo" - the art of conquering
by yielding. This is the western equivalent of "Yes, dear";
[34] a confrontation which always demands the greatest understanding
of the subtle art of insincerity possible between two human
beings;
[35] is not a word, but a sentence;
[36] a delightful form of combat where you get to sleep with
the enemy;
[37] an investment that pays big dividends if you manage to
keep up the interest.
These marriage definitions are just 37 of 5,000+ definitions
appearing in Quinn's Devious Dictionary. Available from him
at words@ . for $25 (postage paid) in the USA. Follow this
link to see the first chapter.
The
following was adapted from Speaker's Sourcebook II by Glenn
Van Ekeren:
Love at first sight is easy to understand; it's when two people
have been looking at each other for a lifetime that it becomes
a miracle.
--Sam Levenson