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How to be Happy Though Married Part 23

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Plato, his theory about marriage, 54; on just penalties, 198.

Pliny the Younger, Letter of, 90.

Portia, 59.

Praise a positive duty, 194.

Pulpit, Suggestion from an American, 5.

Putting things, The art of, 207.

Quaker, Saying of an old, 155.

Queen, Her Majesty the, describes the Prince Consort, 243.

Quickly, Mrs., her advice to Falstaff, 7.

Record, The Sanitary, enumerates some common mistakes, 250.

Religion required in marriage, 8, 76; grotesque perversions of, 183.

Remedy, A very simple, 250.

Reynolds tells of a free-and-easy actor, 209.

Rhodophe, Anecdote of, 53.

Richter, his estimate of a wife, 20; on love, 187; on childhood, 190.

Robertson (of Brighton) on the drudgery of domestic life, 70; a girl's grat.i.tude for a kind look, 210.

Robinson, Professor, on infancy, 159.

Rochefoucauld, An untrue remark of, 255.

Romilly, Sir Samuel, his experience, 30.

Sainte-Beuve on family life, 70.

Scotchman, A, on the Sabbath, 183.

Scott, Sir Walter, ascribed his success to his wife, and to his mother, 25, 163.

Seneca quoted, 62.

Sheridan, his poetical defence of Lady Erskine, 189.

Siddons, Mrs., at home, 227.

Silence may be an instrument of torture, 209.

Simonides never regretted holding his tongue, 202.

Smith, Michael, Letter of, 264.

Smith, Sydney, his definition of marriage, 5; on the rights and feelings of others, 185; "All this is the lobster," 198; on late hours, 252; his cheerful spirit, 253.

Smyth, H., claims 10,000 for his murdered wife, 31.

Socrates, Quiet remark of, 61; asks for double fees, 202.

Somerville, Mary, anecdote in the memoirs of, 8; a good housekeeper, 227.

Spencer, Herbert, on preparation for parenthood, 140, 143; on physical sins, 253.

Sterne, on the best of men, 61; answers Smelfungus, 246.

Steward, A Scotch, answer of, 35.

Stratocles a woman-hater, 15.

Submission, Cheerful, of the poor, 197.

Suss.e.x, labourer, a, asks a question, 128.

Sutherland, Duke of, believes he is going to be married, 72.

Swift and his cook, 58; letter to a young lady, 126; his answer to a Dublin lady, 127; reason why so few marriages are happy, 222.

Talmud, The Jewish, on the treatment of women, 186.

Taylor, Jeremy, on choice in matrimony, 45; offences to be avoided by the newly-married, 102; on children, 147; a quaint ill.u.s.tration, 220; on the dominion of a husband, 239.

Thackeray, on the sort of wives men want, 41; on hard work, 249.

Thrale, Mrs., letter of, 54.

Trollope describes the idea women have of men, 30; Mrs. Proudie's death, 266.

Trouble, how it may be effaced, 196-8.

Walpole, Sir Robert, saying of, 188.

Ward, Artemus, and Betsy Jane, 50; introduced to Brigham Young's mother-in-law, 109.

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