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1. Defile not thy
body neither with excessive foods, tabacco nor alcohol, that thy days may
be long in the house of thee and thy husband's.
2. Put thy husband before they mother, they father, thy daughter or thy
son, for he is thy lifelong companion.
3. Thou shalt not nag.
4. Permit no one to tell thee that thou art having a hard time of it;
neither thy mother, they father, thy sister nor thy neighbor, for the
Judge will not hold her guiltless who letteth another disparge her
husband.
5. Thou shalt not withhold affection from thy husband for every man
loveth to be loved.
6. Forget not the virtue of cleanliness and modest attire. 7. Forgive with grace, for who among us does not need forgiving. 8. Remember that the frank approval of thy husband is worth more to
thee than the admiring glances of a hundred strangers. 9. Keep thy home in good order, for out of it cometh the joys of they
old age. 10. Honor thy Lord thy God all the days of thy life, and thy children
will rise up and call they blessed.
Author Unknown
Marriage
resembles a pair of shears, so joined that they cannot be separated,
often moving in opposite direcitons, yet always punishing anyone
who comes between them. Sydney Smith
Marriage is the Keely cure for love's intoxication. Helen
Rowland
The married man is like the bee that fixes his
hive, auguments the world, benefits the republic, and by daily
diligence, without wronging any, profits all; but he who
contemns wedlock, like a wasp, wanders an offensive in the
world, lives upon spoil, disturbs peace, steals sweets that are
none of his own, and meets misery as his just
reward. Feltham
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