“Courtship,” according
to Sterne, “consists in a number of quiet attentions,
not so pointed as to alarm, nor so vague as not to
be understood.”
In this little quotation lies the
spirit and the letter of all etiquette regarding courtship.
The passion of love generally appearing to everyone
save the man who feels it, so entirely disproportionate
to the value of the object, so impossible to be entered
into by any outside individual, that any strong expressions
of it appear ridiculous to a third person. For
this reason it is that all extravagance of feeling
should be carefully repressed as an offense against
good breeding.
Man was made for woman, and woman
equally for man. How shall they treat each other?
How shall they come to understand their mutual relations
and duties? It is lofty work to write upon this
subject what ought to be written. Mistakes, fatal
blunders, hearts and lives wrecked, homes turned into
bear-gardens, tears, miseries, blasted hopes, awful
tragedies can you name the one most prolific
cause of all these?
If our young people were taught what
they ought to know if it were told them
from infancy up if it were drilled into
them and they were made to understand what now is
all a mystery to them a dark, vague, unriddled
mystery hearts would be happier, homes would
be brighter, lives would be worth living and the world
would be better.
This is now the matter matter
grave and serious enough which we have
in hand. There are gems of wisdom founded on health,
morality, happiness, which should be put within reach
of every household in our whole broad land. It
is a most important, yet neglected subject. People
are squeamish, cursed with mock modesty, ashamed to
speak with their lips what their Creator spoke through
their own minds and bodies when he formed them.
It is time such nonsense nonsense shall
we say? rather say it is time such fatal
folly were withered and cursed by the sober common
sense and moral duty of universal society.
Courtship! Its theme, how delightful!
Its memories and associations, how charming!
Its luxuries the most luxurious proffered to mortals!
Its results how far reaching, and momentous! No
mere lover’s fleeting bauble, but life’s
very greatest work! None are equally portentous,
for good and evil.
Errors of Love-Making.
God’s provisions for man’s
happiness are boundless and endless. How great
are the pleasures of sight, motion, breathing!
How much greater those of mind! Yet a right love
surpasses them all; and can render us all happier
than our utmost imaginations can depict; and a wrong
more miserable.
Right love-making is more important
than right selection; because it affects conjugal
life for the most. Men and women need knowledge
concerning it more than touching anything else.
Their fatal errors show their almost universal ignorance
concerning it. That most married discords originate
in wrong love-making instead of selection, is proved
by love usually declining; while adaptation remains
the same.
Right courtship will harmonize natural
discordants, much more concordants, still more those
already in love; which only some serious causes can
rupture. The whole power of this love element
is enlisted in its perpetuity, as are all the self-interests
of both. As nature’s health provisions
are so perfect that only its great and long-continued
outrage can break it; so her conjugal are so numerous
and perfect that but for outrageous violation of her
love laws all who once begin can and will grow more
and more affectionate and happy every day.
Any man who can begin to elicit any
woman’s love, can perfectly infatuate her more
and more, solely by courting her right; and all women
who once start a man’s love no very
difficult achievement can get out of him,
and do with him, anything possible she pleases.
The charming and fascinating power of serpents over
birds is as nothing compared with that a woman can
wield over a man, and he over her. Ladies, recall
your love hey-day. You had your lover perfectly
spell-bound. He literally knew not what he did
or would do. With what alacrity he sprang to
indulge your every wish, at whatever cost, and do
exactly as you desired! If you had only courted
him just right, he would have continued to grow still
more so till now. This is equally true of a man’s
power over every woman who once begins to love him.
What would you give to again wield that same bewitching
wand?
How to Carry on Courtship.
Intuition, our own selfhood, is nature’s
highest teacher, and infallible; and tells all, by
her “still, small voice within,” whether
and just wherein they are making love right or wrong.
Every false step forewarns all against itself; and
great is their fall who stumble. Courtship has
its own inherent consciousness, which must be kept
inviolate.
Then throw yourself, O courting youth,
upon your own interior sense of propriety and right,
as to both the beginning and conducting of courtship,
after learning all you can from these pages, and have
no fears as to results, but quietly bide them, in
the most perfect assurance of their happy eventuality!
“What can I do or omit to advance
my suit? prevent dismissal? make my very best impression?
guarantee acceptance? touch my idol’s heart?
court just right?” This is what all true courters
say.
Cultivate and manifest whatever qualities
you would awaken. You inspire in the one you
court the precise feeling and traits you yourself
experience. This law effects this result.
Every faculty in either awakens itself in the other.
This is just as sure as gravity itself. Hence
your success must come from within, depends
upon yourself, not the one courted.
Study the specialties, likes and dislikes
in particular, of the one courted, and humor and adapt
yourself to them.
Be extra careful not to prejudice
him or her against you by awakening any faculty in
reverse. Thus whatever rouses the other’s
resistance against you, antagonizes all the other
faculties, and proportionally turns love for you into
hatred. Whatever wounds ambition reverses all
the other feelings, to your injury; what delights it,
turns them in your favor. All the faculties create,
and their action constitutes human nature; which lovers
will do right well to study. To give an illustration:
A Case to the Point.
An elderly man with points in his
favor, having selected a woman eighteen years younger,
but most intelligent and feminine, had two young rivals,
each having more points in their favor, and came to
his final test. She thought much of having plenty
of money. They saw they could “cut him
out” by showing her that he was poor; she till
then thinking his means ample. All four met around
her table, and proved his poverty. His rivals
retired, sure that they had made “his
cake dough,” leaving him with her. It was
his turning-point. He addressed himself right
to her affections, saying little about money
matters, but protesting an amount of devotion for
her to which she knew they were strangers; and left
his suit right on this one point; adding:
“You know I can make money;
know how intensely I esteem, admire, idolize, and
love you. Will not my admitted greater affection,
with my earnings, do more for you than they with more
money, but less love?”
Her clear head saw the point.
Her heart melted into his. She said “yes.”
He triumphed by this affectional spirit alone over
their much greater availability.
Manifesting the domestic affections
and virtues, a warm, gushing friendly nature, fondness
for children and home, inspires a man’s love
most of all, while evincing talents by a man peculiarly
enamors woman.
Relations, you shall not interfere,
where even parents may not. Make your own matches,
and let others make theirs; especially if you have
bungled your own. One such bungle is one
too many.
The parties are betrothed. Their
marriage is “fore-ordained” by themselves,
its only rightful umpires, which all right-minded
outsiders will try to promote, not prevent. How
despicable to separate husbands and wives! Yet
is not parting those married by a love-spirit,
equally so? Its mere legal form can but increase
its validity, not create it. Marriage is a divine
institution, and consists in their own personal betrothal.
Hence breaking up a true love-union before its legal
consummation, is just as bad as parting loving husband
and wife; which is monstrous. All lovers who allow
it are its wicked partakers.
Choice of Associates.
The first point to be considered on
this subject is a careful choice of associates, which
will often, in the end, save future unhappiness and
discomfort, since, as Goldsmith so truthfully puts
it, “Love is often an involuntary passion placed
upon our companions without our consent, and frequently
conferred without even our previous esteem.”
This last most unhappy state of affairs
may, to a great extent, be avoided by this careful
choosing of companions. Especially is this true
on the part of the lady, since, from the nature and
constitution of society, an unsuitable acquaintance,
friendship, or alliance, is more embarrassing and
more painful for the woman than the man. As in
single life an undesirable acquaintance is more derogatory
to a woman than to a man, so in married life, the
woman it is who ventures most, “for,”
as Jeremy Taylor writes, “she hath no sanctuary
in which to retire from an evil husband; she may complain
to God as do the subjects of tyrants and princes,
but otherwise she hath no appeal in the causes of
unkindness.”
First Steps.
To a man who has become fascinated
with some womanly ideal, we would say, if the acquaintanceship
be very recent, and he, as yet, a stranger to her
relatives, that he should first consider in detail
his position and prospects in life, and judge whether
or not they are such as would justify him in striving
to win the lady’s affections, and later on her
hand in marriage. Assured upon this point, and
let no young man think that a fortune is necessary
for the wooing of any woman worth the winning, let
him then gain the needful introductions through some
mutual friend to her parents or guardians.
If, on the other hand, it is a long
acquaintance that has ripened into admiration, this
latter formality will be unnecessary.
As to the lady, her position is negative
to a great extent. Yet it is to be presumed that
her preferences, though unexpressed, are decided,
and, if the attentions of a gentleman are agreeable,
her manners will be apt to indicate, in some degree,
the state of her mind.
Prudence, however, does, or should,
warn her not to accept too marked attentions from
a man of whose past life she knows nothing, and of
whose present circumstances she is equally ignorant.
Character.
There is one paramount consideration
too often overlooked and too late bewailed in many
a ruined home, and that is the character of the man
who seeks to win a woman’s hand. Parents
and guardians cannot be too careful in this regard,
and young women themselves should, by refusing such
associates, avoid all danger of contracting such ties.
Wealth, nor family rank, nor genius, availeth aught
if the character of the man be flawed.
Let parents teach their daughters
and let girls understand for themselves that happiness,
or peace, in married life is impossible where a man
is, in any wise, dissipated, or liable to be overcome
by any of the fashionable vices of the day. Better
go down to your grave a “forlorn spinster”
than marry such a man.
Disposition.
As to temper or disposition, the man
or woman can easily gain some insight into the respective
peculiarities of another’s temperament by a
little quiet observation. If the gentleman be
courteous and careful in his attentions to his mother
and sisters, and behave with ease and consideration
toward all women, irrespective of age, rank, or present
condition, she may feel that her first estimate was
a correct one. On the other hand, should he show
disrespect toward women as a class, sneer at sacred
things, evince an inclination for expensive pleasures
in advance of his means, or for low amusements or companionship;
be cruel to the horse he drives, or display an absence
of all energy in his business pursuits, then is it
time to gently, but firmly, repel all nearer advances
on his part.
As to the gentleman, it will be well
for him also to watch carefully as to the disposition
of the lady and her conduct in her own family.
If she be attentive and respectful to her parents,
kind and affectionate toward her brothers and sisters,
not easily ruffled in temper and with inclination
to enjoy the pleasures of home; cheerful, hopeful
and charitable in disposition, then may he feel, indeed,
that he has a prize before him well worth the winning.
If, however, she should display a
strong inclination towards affectation and flirtation;
be extremely showy or else careless in her attire,
frivolous in her tastes and eager for admiration, he
may rightly conclude that very little home happiness
is to be expected from her companionship.
Trifling.
A true gentleman will never confine
his attentions exclusively to one lady unless he has
an intention of marriage. To do so exposes her
to all manner of conjecture, lays an embargo on the
formation of other acquaintances, may very seriously
compromise her happiness, and by after withdrawal
frequently causes her the severest mortification.
Hence a gentleman with no thought of marriage is in
honor bound to make his attentions to ladies as general
as possible.
Still more reprehensible is the conduct
of the man who insinuates himself into the affections
of a young girl by every protestation and avowal possible,
save that which would be binding upon himself, and
then withdraws his attentions with the boastful consciousness
that he has not committed himself.
Again, the young lady who willfully,
knowingly, deliberately, draws on a man to place hand
and heart at her disposal simply for the pleasure
of refusing him and thus adding one more name to her
list of rejected proposals, is utterly unworthy the
name of woman.
Etiquette of Making and Receiving Gifts.
On the question of gifts there is
a point of etiquette to be observed. Gentlemen,
as a rule, do not offer ladies presents, save of fruits,
flowers, or confections; which gifts, notwithstanding
that a small fortune may be lavished upon their purchase,
are supposed, in all probability from their perishable
character, to leave no obligation resting upon the
lady.
Should the conversation, however,
turn upon some new book or musical composition, which
the lady has not seen, the gentleman may, with perfect
propriety, say, “I wish that you could see such
or such a work and, if you will permit, I should be
pleased to send you a copy.” It is then
optional with the lady to accept or refuse.
Should a gentleman persist in offering
other gifts there must be no secrecy about it.
She should take early opportunity of saying, in the
presence of her father and mother, “I am very
much obliged to you for that ring, pin (or other gift)
which you were so kind as to offer me the other day,
and I shall be happy to accept it if Papa or Mamma
does not object.” If the lady is positive
in her objections to receiving gifts, it is easy to
say, “I thank you for the kindness but I never
take expensive presents;” or, “Mamma never
permits me to accept expensive presents.”
These refusals are always to be taken by the gentleman
in good part. Where a present has been unadvisedly
accepted, it is perfectly proper for the mother to
return it with thanks, saying, “I think my daughter
rather young to accept such expensive gifts.”
After an engagement is formally made
the etiquette of gifts is somewhat altered, though
even then expensive presents, unless it be the engagement
ring, are not in the best taste. These should
be reserved for the marriage gifts.
Proposals of Marriage.
The proposal itself is a subject so
closely personal in its nature that each man must
be a law unto himself in the matter, and time and
opportunity will be his only guides to success, unless,
mayhap, his lady-love be the braver of the two and
help him gently over the hardest part, for there be
men and men; some who brook not “no” for
an answer, and some that a moment’s hesitation
on the part of the one sought would seal their lips
forever.
A woman must always remember that
a proposal of marriage is the highest honor that a
man can pay her, and, if she must refuse it, to do
so in such fashion as to spare his feelings as much
as possible. If she be a true and well-bred woman,
both proposal and refusal will be kept a profound
secret from every one save her parents. It is
the least balm she can offer to the wounded pride
of the man who has chosen her from out all women to
bear his name and to reign in his home. A wise
woman can almost always prevent matters from coming
to the point of a declaration, and, by her actions
and her prompt acceptance of the attentions of others,
should strive to show the true state of her feelings.
A gentleman should usually take “no”
for an answer unless he be of so persevering a disposition
as to be determined to take the fort by siege; or
unless the “no” was so undecided in its
tone as to give some hope of finding true the poet’s
words:
“He gave them but one
tongue to say us, ‘Nay,’
And
two fond eyes to grant.”
On the gentleman’s part, a decided
refusal should be received as calmly as possible,
and his resolve should be in no way to annoy the cause
of all his pain. If mere indifference be or seem
to be the origin of the refusal, he may, after a suitable
length of time, press his suit once more; but if an
avowed or evident preference for another be the reason,
it becomes imperative that he should at once withdraw
from the field. Any reason that the lady may,
in her compassion, see fit to give him as cause for
her refusal, should ever remain his inviolable secret.
As whatever grows has its natural
period for maturing, so has love. At engagement
you have merely selected, so that your familiarity
should be only intellectual, not affectional.
You are yet more acquaintances than companions.
As sun changes from midnight darkness into noonday
brilliancy, and heats, lights up, and warms gradually,
and as summer “lingers in the lap of spring;”
so marriage should dally in the lap of courtship.
Nature’s adolescence of love should never be
crowded into a premature marriage. The more personal,
the more impatient it is; yet to establish its Platonic
aspect takes more time than is usually given it; so
that undue haste puts it upon the carnal plane, which
soon cloys, then disgusts.
Unbecoming Haste.
Coyness and modesty always accompany
female love, which involuntarily shrink from close
masculine contact until its mental phase is sufficiently
developed to overrule the antagonistic intimacies of
marriage.
Besides, why curtail the luxuries
of courtship? Should haste to enjoy the lusciousness
of summer engulf the delights of spring? The
pleasures of courtship are unsurpassed throughout life,
and quite too great to be curtailed by hurrying marriage.
And enhancing or diminishing them redoubles or curtails
those of marriage a hundredfold more. A happy
courtship promotes conjugal felicity more than anything
else whatever. A lady, asked why she didn’t
marry, since she had so many making love to her, replied:
“Because being courted is too great a luxury
to be spoilt by marrying.”
No man should wait to make his pile.
Two must acquire a competence conjointly, in
order fully to really enjoy it together.
This alone can give full zest to whatever pleasures
it produces.
A formal proffer of marriage naturally
follows a man’s selection and decision as to
whom he will marry. Consent to canvass their mutual
adaptations implies consent to marry, if all is found
satisfactory; yet a final test and consummation now
become necessary, both to bring this whole matter
to a focus, and allow both to state, and obviate or
waive, those objections which must needs exist on both
sides; including any improvements possible in either.
How to Deal with Objections.
The best time to state and waive or
remove all objections, seeming and real, not already
adjusted, is at his proposal, and her acceptance.
A verbal will do, but a written is much better, by
facilitating future reference. A long future
awaits their marriage; hence committing this its initial
point to writing, so that both can look back to it,
is most desirable. And he can propose, and she
accept, much better when alone, and they have all
their faculties under full control, than verbally,
perhaps, when excited. Those same primal reasons
for reducing all other contracts to writing obtain
doubly in reference to marriage.
You who fear awkwardness on paper,
remember that true human nature always appears well,
even when poorly dressed. A diamond is no less
brilliant because set in clay. Mode is nothing,
reality everything. All needed to appear well
is to feel right, and express naturally what
is felt. Saying plainly what you have to say,
is all required.
The acceptance or rejection should
also be unequivocal, or any contingencies stated,
and waived if minor, but if they can neither be obviated
nor compromised, should terminate their relations,
that both may look elsewhere. If any bones of
contention exist, now is the time to inter them finally,
and to take the initiatory steps for perfecting both
in each other’s eyes. Bear in mind that
as yet your relations are still those of business
merely, because neither has acquired or conceded any
right to love or be loved. Without pretending
to give model letters of proposal, acceptance, or
rejection, because varying circumstances will vary
each ad infinitum, the following may serve
as samples from which to work:
“MUCH ESTEEMED
FRIEND: As we have agreed to canvass our
mutual adaptations for
marriage, and my own mind is fully
made up, a final decision
now becomes necessary.
“What I have learned of and from
you confirms that high opinion of you which prompted
my selection of you, and inspires a desire to
consummate it. Your pleasing manner and mode
of saying and doing things; your intelligence, taste,
prudence, kindness, and many other excellencies,
inspire my highest admiration.
“Will you let
me love what I so much admire?
“But my affections are sacred.
I can bestow them only on one who reciprocates
them; will bestow them upon you, if you will
bestow yours on me; not otherwise; for only mutual
love can render either happy. I can and will
love you alone, with all my heart, provided you
can and will love only me, with all of yours.
Do you accord me this privilege, on this condition,
for life, forever? I crave to make you my wife;
to live with and for you, and proffer you my whole
being, with honest, assiduous toil, fidelity
to business, what talents I possess, and all
I can do to contribute to your creature comforts.
Do you accord me this privilege, on this condition?
May I enshrine you as queen of my life?
“Say wherein you
find me faulty, or capable of improvement
in your eyes, and I
will do my utmost, consistently with my
conscience, to render
myself worthy and acceptable to you.
“I wish some things were different
in you that you had better health,
arose earlier, were less impulsive, knew more about
keeping house, etc.; yet these minor matters sink
into insignificance in comparison with your many
excellences, and especially that whole-souled
affection obviously inherent in you.
“Deliberate fully, for this is
a life affair, and if, in order to decide judiciously,
you require to know more of me, ask me, or
and . Please reply as soon as
you can well decide.
“Decline unless you accept cordially,
and can love me truly and wholly; but if you
can and will reciprocate my proffered affection,
say yes, and indicate your own time and mode of our
marriage. Meanwhile, with the highest regards,
I am, and hope ever to remain,
“Yours truly,
“A.B.”
A true woman could give a better answer
than the following, which does not claim to be a model.
It is hardly time yet for a gushing love-letter, or
we would not profane this sacred subject by making
the attempt; yet should like to receive one in spirit
somewhat as follows:
“DEAR SIR:
Your proffer of your hand and heart in marriage
has been duly received,
and its important contents fully
considered.
“I accept your offer: and
on its only condition, that I reciprocate
your love, which I do completely; and hereby both
offer my own hand and heart in return, and consecrate
my entire being, soul and body, all I am and can
become, to you alone; both according you the
‘privilege’ you crave of loving me,
and ‘craving’ a like one in return.
“Thank Heaven that this matter
is settled; that you are in very deed mine, while
I am yours, to love and be loved by, live and
be lived with and for; and that my gushing affections
have a final resting-place on one every way so worthy
of the fullest reciprocal sympathy and trust.
“The preliminaries of our marriage
we will arrange whenever we meet, which I hope
may be soon. But whether sooner or later,
or you are present or absent, I now consider myself
as wholly yours, and you all mine; and both give
and take the fullest privilege of cherishing
and expressing for you that whole-souled love
I find even now gushing up and calling for expression.
Fondly hoping to hear from and see you soon and
often, I remain wholly yours forever,
“C.D.”
Sealing the Vow.
The vow and its tangible witnesses
come next. All agreements require to be attested;
and this as much more than others as it is the most
obligatory. Both need its unequivocal and mutual
mementos, to be cherished for all time to come as
its perpetual witnesses. This vow of each to
the other can neither be made too strong, nor held
too sacred. If calling God to witness will strengthen
your mutual adjuration, swear by Him and His throne,
or by whatever else will render it inviolable, and
commit it to writing, each transcribing a copy for
the other as your most sacred relics, to be enshrined
in your “holy of holies.”
Two witnesses are required, one for
each. A ring for her and locket for him, containing
the likeness of both, as always showing how they now
look, or any keepsake both may select, more or less
valuable, to be handed down to their posterity, will
answer.
Your mode of conducting your future
affairs should now be arranged. Though implied
in selection, yet it must be specified in detail.
Both should arrange your marriage relations; say what
each desires to do, and have done; and draw out a
definite outline plan of the various positions you
desire to maintain towards each other. Your future
home must be discussed: whether you will board,
or live in your own house, rented, or owned, or built,
and after what pattern; or with either or which of
your parents. And it is vastly important that
wives determine most as to their domiciles; their
internal arrangements, rooms, furniture, management;
respecting which they are consulted quite too little,
yet cannot well be too much.
Family rules, as well as national,
state, corporate, financial, must be established.
They are most needed, yet least practiced in marriage.
Without them, all must be chaotic. Ignoring them
is a great but common marital error. The Friends
wisely make family method cardinal.
A Full Understanding.
Your general treatment of each other
now especially requires to be mutually agreed upon.
Each should say, “I should like to treat and
be treated by you thus, but not so; and let you do
this but not that;” and both mutually agree
on a thousand like minor points, better definitely
arranged at first than left for future contention;
each making requisitions, conceding privileges, and
stipulating for any fancies, idols, or “reserved
rights.”
Differences must needs arise, which
cannot be adjusted too soon. Those constitutionally
inherent in each should be adjusted in love’s
early stages; it matters less how, than whether
to your mutual satisfaction. Or if this is impossible,
“agree to disagree;” but settle on something.
A concessionary spirit is indispensable,
and inheres in love. Neither should insist, but
both concede, in all things; each making, not demanding
sacrifices. The one who loves most will yield
to oblige most. What course will make both happiest
should overrule all your mutual relations.
Write down and file all. Your
present decisions, subject to mutual changes and amendments,
will become more and more important for future reference,
as time rolls on, by enabling each to correct both;
for our own changes make us think others have changed.
A mutual diary is desirable; for incidents now seemingly
trivial, may yet become important.
Important Trifles.
See or correspond with each other
often. Love will not bear neglect. Nothing
kills it equally. In this it is most exacting.
It will not, should not, be second in anything.
“First or nothing,” is its motto.
Meet as often as possible. After its fires have
once been lit, they must be perpetually resupplied
with their natural fuel; else they die down, go out,
or go elsewhere; and are harder to rekindle than to
light at first.
A splendid young man, son of one of
New England’s most talented and pious divines,
endowed with one of the very best of organisms, physical
and phrenological, having selected his mate, and plighted
their mutual vows, being the business manager of a
large manufactory, and obliged to defend several consecutive
lawsuits for patent-right infringements, neglected
for weeks to write to his betrothed, presupposing,
of course, that all was right. This offended her
ladyship, and allowed evil-minded meddlers to sow seeds
of alienation in her mind; persuade her to send him
his dismissal, and accept a marriage proposal from
another.
As he told his mournful story, he
seemed like a sturdy oak riven by lightning and torn
by whirlwinds; its foliage scorched, bark stripped,
limbs tattered, even its very rootlets scathed; yet
standing, a stern, proud, defiant, resolute wreck.
A gushing tear he manfully tried but failed to suppress.
His lips quivered and voice faltered. Perceiving
his impending fate, he seemed to dread his future more
than present; and hesitated between self-abandonment,
and a merely mechanical, objectless, business life.
In attempting his salvation, by proffering advice
to the “broken-hearted,” he respectfully
but firmly declined; deliberately preferring old-bachelorship,
with all its dearths, of which he seemed fully conscious.
He felt as if he had been deeply wronged.
Yet was not he the first practically
to repudiate? He suffered terribly, because he
had sinned grievously, not by commission, but omission.
He felt the deepest, fullest, manliest love, and revelled
in anticipations of their future union, but did not
express it; which was to her as if he had not
felt it; whereas, had he saved but one minute per
week to write lovingly, “I long to be with you,
and love you still,” or, “Business does
not, cannot diminish my fondness,” he would
have saved her broken vows, and his broken heart.
Mingling other enjoyments with love,
by going together to picnics and parties, sleigh-rides
and Mayings, concerts, and lectures, marvellously
cements the affections.
Love Feeds on Love.
Meet in your most attractive habiliments
of mind and person. French ladies will see their
affianced only when arrayed in their best toilet.
Yet mental charms vastly surpass millinery. Neither
can render yourselves too lovely.
Express affectionate fondness in your
visits and letters; the more the better, so that you
keep it a sentiment, not debase it by animal passion.
It is still establishing its rootlets, like young corn,
instead of growing. Allow no amatory excitement,
no frenzied, delirious intoxication with it; for its
violence, like every other, must react only to exhaust
and paralyze itself by its own excesses.
Affianced young man, life has its
epochs, which revolutionize it for good or bad.
You are now in one. You have heretofore affiliated
much with men; formed habits of smoking or chewing
tobacco; indulged in late suppers; abused yourself
in various ways; perhaps been on sprees. Now
is your time to take a new departure from whatever
is evil to all that is good and pure. Break up
most of your masculine associations; and affiliate
chiefly with your affianced. Be out no more nights.
Let your new responsibilities and relations brace
you up against their temptations; and, if these are
not sufficient, your prospective spouse will help.
No other aid in resisting temptation and inspiring
to good equals that of a loving, loved woman.
Break off from your cronyisms, clubs,
societies, all engagements except such as mean imperative,
cold-blooded business. Your new ties furnish
an excellent excuse. All your spare time and small
change are wanted for her. To give to
bad habits the time and money due to her and setting
up in life, is outrageous. Bend everything to
your new relations, them to nothing. Now’s
your time to turn over a new leaf, and turn all the
angles, corners and right-about faces needed.
Affianced maiden, you have some departures
to take and corners to turn. Your life has till
now been frivolous, but has now become serious.
You have no more need of toilet fineries; for
“your market is made,” and you have work
on hand far more important, namely, fitting yourself
for your new duties. Find out what they demand
of you, and set right about making a premium wife
and mother. Both begin life anew. Forgetting
the past, plant and sow now what you would gather and
become always.
The Best of all Possessions.
Woman is man’s choicest treasure.
That is the most precious which confers the most happiness.
She is adapted to render him incomparably happier
than any other terrestrial possession. He can
enjoy luscious peaches, melting pears, crack horses,
dollars and other things innumerable; but a well-sexed
man can enjoy woman most of all. He is poor indeed,
and takes little pleasure in this life, be his possessions
and social position what they may, who takes no pleasure
with her. All description utterly fails to express
the varied and exultant enjoyments God has engrafted
into a right sexual state. Only few experiences
can attest how many and great, from infancy to death,
and throughout eternity itself. All God could
do He has done to render each sex superlatively happy
in the other. Of all his beautiful and perfect
work, this is the most beautiful and perfect.
Of all his benignant devices, this is his most benign.
All the divine attributes, all human happiness, converge
in male and female adaptations to mutual enjoyments.
Each is correspondingly precious to
the other. Man should prize many things, yet
woman is his pearl of greatest price. He should
preserve, cherish, husband many life possessions,
but woman the most. He has many jewels in his
crown of glory, but she is his gem-jewel, his diadem.
What masculine luxury equals making women in general,
and the loved one in particular, happy?
The Source of Miseries.
Beginning and conducting courtship
as this chapter directs, avoiding the errors and following
the directions it specifies, will just as surely render
all superlatively happy as sun will rise to-morrow.
Scan their sense. Do they not expound nature’s
love-initiating and consummating ordinances?
Are they not worthy of being put into practice?
Discordants, can you not trace many of your antagonisms
and miseries to their ignorant violation? Parents,
what are they worth to put into your children’s
hands, to forewarn them against carelessly, ignorantly,
spoiling their marriage? Young ladies, what are
they worth to you, as showing you how to so treat
your admirers as to gain and redouble their heart’s
devotion? Young men, what are these warnings
and teachings worth to you? God in his natural
laws will bless all who practice, curse all who violate
them.
The conduct during engagement on the
part of the gentleman should be marked by the utmost
courtesy toward and confidence in the woman of his
choice; a state of feeling which she should fully reciprocate.
In public their behavior toward one
another should not be markedly different from that
displayed by them toward other men and women of their
acquaintance; save that the bridegroom-elect should
be on the watch that not the slightest wish of the
lady be unfulfilled.
As for the lady, while she is not
expected to debar herself from accepting the customary
courtesies extended by the gentlemen of her acquaintance,
a slight reserve should mark her conduct in accepting
them. At all places of amusement or entertainment
she should appear either in the company of her fiance,
or that of some relative.
She should never captiously take offense
at her fiance’s showing the same attention
to other ladies that she, in her turn, is willing to
accept from other gentlemen, and she should take the
same pains to please his taste in trifles that he
does to gratify her slightest wish.
This does not mean, though, that in
the selfishness and blindness of love and
love is very blind and selfish sometimes she
is to shut herself up to his companionship at all
times, excluding him from the family circle of which
he is so soon to become a member, and “pairing
off” on all occasions, thus rendering both the
mark for silly jestings.
How to Cherish Love.
But, in sober matter-of-fact, that
little ring of gold does not mean utter blindness.
It does not mean that she is to devote her evenings
exclusively to the chosen one, ignoring her family
entirely. It does not mean that she is to accept
valuable presents of all kinds at his hands, to expect
him to give up all his friends for her sake, nor to
confide all the secrets of the household to his keeping,
but, as one wise woman says, to “guard herself
in word and deed; hold his love in the best way possible;
tie it firmly with the blue ribbon of hope, and never
let it be eaten away by the little fox who destroys
so many loving ties, and who is called familiarity.”
Neither is this counsel to be deemed
over-cautious, since, alas! even “engagements”
are sometimes broken in this uncertain world, and surely
there is no womanly woman that would not in such an
event reflect gladly, as she took up her life once
more at the old point, that she had remembered these
things.
A domineering, jealous disposition
on either side before marriage is not the best possible
guarantee for after happiness, and if these traits
are clearly shown during an engagement, the individual
who escapes from such thraldom before it is too late
has shown conclusively that discretion which is, at
times, the better part of valor.
Conduct Toward Parents.
The gentleman should exercise some
tact in regard to his conduct toward the family of
his betrothed. Marked attention should be shown
toward the lady’s mother. He should accommodate
himself as much as possible to the wishes, habits
and ways of the household, and not being, as yet,
a member of the family, he should not presume to show
an intrusive familiarity of conversation.
The lady, on her part, should strive
to show consideration, friendliness, and a desire
to please the parents of her husband-that-is-to-be.
Thus both will unite in the endeavor to overcome that
loving jealousy so natural on the part of those who
see the claims of another grown paramount in the heart
of one of their number, and feel that these new links
are fast becoming stronger than ties of blood and
relationship.
The respective families should meet
these advances with all kindness, and should also
endeavor, in view of the new union pending between
them, to make, if this be necessary, one another’s
acquaintance as soon as convenient.
Length of Engagements.
Engagements should not be entered
upon prematurely, a certain degree of acquaintanceship
proving no mean preparation for an arrangement of
this nature. But when an engagement is once formed
it should not, in the majority of cases, be of an
undue length. This is a matter to be settled
by the wishes or the circumstances of the contracting
parties.
It is oftimes the measure of wisdom,
where the obstacle is lack of fortune, to risk some
degree of deprivation, rather than submit to a long-protracted
engagement; the man, as head of the new home, finding
a fresh motive for ambitious striving, and both parties
being preserved from that coolness of feeling too
attendant upon years of waiting. No homes are
happier than those constructed on the principle of
economy and patient effort.
Broken Engagements.
Not unfrequently does it occur that
circumstances arise that render the dissolution of
an engagement inevitable, and, as such a course, unless
mutual, of necessity involves an injury to the feelings
of one party, great care and delicacy should be employed
in approaching the subject.
If the occasion should arise on the
lady’s side, it must be remembered that she
is not bound to declare any other reason than her own
sweet will. It is better, however, for reasons
to be frankly given, that the step may not be attributed
to mere caprice on her part. On the side of the
man the reasons must be strong, indeed, that can justify
him in breaking a solemn engagement sought of his
own free will, and urged by him upon the object of
his choice. By thus releasing himself he not
unfrequently leaves the lady in an embarrassing position
before the public, not to mention the possible injury
that may be inflicted upon the deepest feelings of
her heart.
If the cause should arise from any
fault on the part of the lady, a man of honor will
ever preserve the strictest silence on the subject.
If from sudden failure in his own fortunes he should
feel himself in duty bound to relinquish his hope
of present happiness lest he selfishly drag another
down to penury, let the reason be carefully and clearly
explained.
At the conclusion of an engagement
let every gift, including the engagement ring, and
all photographs and letters that have been exchanged
between the two, be promptly returned by each that
as little as possible may remain to remind of the
days that are done. It is especially a point
of honor on the gentleman’s part to retain nothing
that the lady may have given, or written, him.
Etiquette of Married Life.
Marriage, to the elect, may be fitly
termed a state of grace, but without a close observance
of all the courtesies that tend to uplift everyday
life in some degree above the narrowness of mere existence
it may but too easily become what the old cynic declared
it to be when he wrote, “Marriage is a feast
in which the grace is sometimes better than the dinner.”
Mutual confidence and mutual respect
are the two principal factors in the case. Without
these there can be none of that harmony so necessary
to happiness in the state matrimonial. And not
only this, but they should strive to be mutually entertaining.
The pains they took during their engagement
to be agreeable to one another at a time when they
were by no means entirely dependent upon themselves
for companionship, would surely not be amiss in rendering
pleasant the years, and it may be decades of years,
during which they must be to a great extent dependent
upon each other for entertainment. The young
man who spent so much time at the home of a certain
lady that he was finally asked why, if he was in love
with her, he did not marry her, uttered a sad truth
when he answered, “Ah, but where then should
I pass my evenings?” A reflection upon the agreeableness
of married life that might easily be avoided by the
exercise of care and tact on both sides.
The Art of Agreeableness.
Philip Gilbert Hammerton, in his Intellectual
Life, wisely suggests: “A married couple
are clearly aware that, in the course of a few years,
their society is sure to become mutually uninteresting
unless something is done. What is that something?
Every author who succeeds, takes the trouble to renew
his mind by fresh knowledge, new thoughts. So,
is it not at least worth while to do as much to preserve
the interest of marriage?”
The wife who dresses for her husband’s
sake, who reads that she may qualify herself for conversation
with him, who makes him the chief end of her cares,
and the husband who brings home from the outside world
some of its life and animation to share with her, who
has a loving interest in all that she has done for
his pleasure, and, if wealth be a stranger at their
door, stands ready to lift the heaviest burdens from
her shoulders, have solved for themselves the problem
of married happiness, and found it to be a condition
wherein every joy is doubled and every sorrow halved.
Duty Toward One Another.
Let the wife have no confidant as
to the little shortcomings of her husband, over which
love, as well as pride, should draw a sheltering veil.
Never listen to an unkind tale of his past or present
mistakes, and count all those who would seek thus
to destroy your peace of mind as your bitterest enemies.
Let the husband in his turn remember that an unkind
or slighting word spoken of his wife, touches his own
honor to the quick, and be instant in resenting the
words that should never have been spoken in his presence.
Another point to be remembered in
view of the duty of husband and wife toward one another,
is with reference to attending church or entertainments.
The wife has, in all probability, left a home where
the different members of the household were ready to
accompany each other whenever occasion served, and
young friends were planning many a pleasant outing,
and now she is wholly dependent upon her husband for
all of these things. Let her beware, under these
circumstances, of allowing herself to attend church,
lecture, or any other evening entertainment, in the
company of well-meaning friends. For the husband,
once seeing that his wife can attend these places without
his assistance, will soon, if such be his disposition,
remain selfishly home at all times, or, if otherwise
inclined, still more selfishly find his amusement
in places widely foreign to his wife’s happiness
or peace of mind. The carelessness of many well-meaning
men in this respect is the cause of very much unhappiness
that might be wholly avoided by a little consideration
as to the utter dependence of the wife upon her husband
for all these recreations.
Home Attire.
This is a subject that it should be
unnecessary to touch upon, but, unfortunately, too
many bright, pretty, carefully-dressed girls degenerate
into careless, fretful, untidy and illy-clad young
wives, whose presence is anything but a joy forever
to the individuals who must face them across the family
board for three hundred and sixty-five days in every
year. And it is this careless young woman who
is first to complain that “John does not care
for me in the least, now we are married,” while
John is very apt to think, “If Carrie would
only take just a little of the pains to please me now
that she did six months ago, how much happier we would
be.” And John is quite right about it.
This very carelessness on the part of wives has marred
the happiness of more than one new home. The
ribbon, the flower, the color that “John likes”
and the smile that crowns all are magical in their
effects.
Then let John always remember to bring
to this home a pleasant face, from which business
cares are driven away, and a readiness to please and
be pleased, that meets the wife’s attempts half
way, and the evening meal will be made delightful
by pleasant chat, which should never consist of a
resume of the day’s tribulations, but
should turn on subjects calculated to remove from
the mind all trace of their existence, and thus will
they arise at its close better and happier for the
hour that has passed.
Household and Personal Expenses.
One of the chief sources of unhappiness
in married life is the strife arising from the vexed
question of home and personal expenses. In the
first place, the husband frequently fails in regard
to openness with regard to his business concerns and
profits; thus the wife, entirely ignorant as to what
amount she may safely spend, errs too often on the
side of extravagance, finding too late, when a storm
of reproach descends upon her innocent head, where
and how she has sinned.
Then, too, it is often a sore trial
to the wife’s pride to ask for the money necessary
to keep her own wardrobe in repair. Especially
is this the case when, before marriage, she was in
receipt of her own money, earned by her own hands.
It seems to her that her husband ought to see that
she has need of certain articles, and the very fact
that he does not, leads her to the false supposition
that he has ceased to care for her, while he, if there
was any thought about it in his mind, would say, “Why
doesn’t she ask for money if she wants it?
She knows I will give it to her if I have it.”
All these troubles would be avoided
if married couples early came to a definite understanding
on this subject, and a certain sum were set aside
which the wife was to receive weekly for household
expenses, her personal wants to be supplied from such
surplus as she may be able to save from out this sum,
or in some other way provided for by a stated amount,
both of which sums should be under her exclusive, unquestioned
control.
Some simple system of accounts should
then be kept and regularly gone over together on every
quarter. A mutual agreement thus established on
the money question, much annoyance and much extravagance
may be prevented. It is not too much to suggest
that, perhaps, it might not be amiss to present an
account of the husband’s expenses also, at these
quarterly reckonings.
Above all things, never let the wife,
from a weak desire to gratify her own personal vanity,
enter upon some extravagant purchase, the amount of
which she must conceal from her husband, and (vainly
often) strive to pay in small amounts saved or borrowed.
The result is usually exposure, sometimes disgrace,
pecuniary loss and loss of esteem in the husband’s
eyes. Perfect confidence is the only basis upon
which happiness can be safely founded.
A Pleasant Disposition.
Cultivate, on both sides, a disposition
to restrain all unseemly exhibitions of temper.
Hysterics and prolonged and repeated fits of tears
soon lose their effect, and, at the last, a half-pitying
contempt is their only result. Let all conversation
be refined in its tone. The force of example
in this respect carries with it a silent, impressive
power that is not easily resisted and lapses therefrom
involve a loss of this influence that cannot be easily
estimated.
Profanity, too, is a deadly foe in
the household and any wife that permits her husband
to swear in her presence, either to herself, or concerning
others, lessens her own self-respect each time it occurs.
That profanity can be repressed, has been shown her
by the fact that, no matter how long the previous
engagement may have lasted, no word of such import
escaped the man’s lips in her presence, and surely
the woman chosen to be head of his home is no less
worthy of his respect than was the girl he wooed.
The habit of indulging in cutting
or harsh remarks is one to be guarded against.
Mutual politeness should be exercised by both husband
and wife, and in all cases watch should be set over
the mouth, and the door of the lips well kept.
Boarding Versus Home Life.
The tendency in all large cities,
at this present time, points toward fashionable boarding-houses,
or expensive lodging-houses, as the nuclei round which
the newly-married most do congregate.
It may be that the wife is utterly
unused to the care of a house (in which case the sooner
she learn the art, the happier for both parties) or,
perhaps, the financial resources of the husband are
unable to support the drain consequent upon furnishing
a home that shall gratify the foolish pride of the
wife. But, whatever the cause, the effects are
the same, and are to be found in the utter unfitness
of women adopting this manner of existence for any
of the serious duties of life that, sooner or later,
come upon all who wear this mortal garb.
Then, too, in the idle, censorious,
gossiping, novel-reading life that flourishes in this
hothouse existence, the seeds of lifelong misery are
not infrequently sown.
Let a home, then, however small, be
one of the first considerations in beginning the married
life, and let the adding to, and the beautifying of,
this precious possession be the duty and the privilege
of the years to come.
To the wife, in her housewifely rôle,
belongs the care of overseeing or accomplishing with
her own hands, the varied duties that go to secure
the daily well-being of the home. She must see
that the rooms are bright, neat, and cosily arranged;
that the meals are appetizingly and punctually served,
and be herself neatly and tastefully attired to preside
at the table.
Due allowances are to be made for
the amount of manual labor she has been obliged to
perform with her own hands, still, by care and tact
a woman can always maintain a certain degree of neatness.
Let the husband, on his part, bring
into the home cheerfulness, with a quick remembrance
of all those little attentions that go so far toward
making up the sum of earthly happiness. Let him
see that, to the best of his ability, the home wants
are provided for, and be not forgetful to lend the
help of his stronger hand wherever needed. (Read carefully
other hints in department of Home Etiquette.)
Never demand of your wife more than
you are willing to give. If you desire to be
received with smiles, enter the house with a cheerful
mien, and you will find there are few women who are
not willing to give measure for measure, and even
a little more than they receive of kindly attention.
For a wife will usually shine, like the moon, by reflection,
and her happiness will always reflect your own.