Marriage - a book of which the first chapter is written in poetry and the remaining chapters in prose.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
A lot of books about marriage are about marriages falling apart.
A so-called happy marriage corresponds to love as a correct poem to an improvised song.
In my mind, marriage is a spiritual partnership and union in which we willingly give and receive love, create and share intimacy, and open ourselves to be available and accessible to another human being in order to heal, learn and grow.
Marriage is a custom brought about by women who then proceed to live off men and destroy them, completely enveloping the man in a destructive cocoon or eating him away like a poisonous fungus on a tree.
If you want to read about love and marriage, you've got to buy two separate books.
I think marriage is one of those things that writers draw on, one of those emotional reservoirs that go way back.
Marriage, n: the state or condition of a community consisting of a master, a mistress, and two slaves, making in all, two.
Marriage is not a noun; it's a verb. It isn't something you get. It's something you do. It's the way you love your partner every day.
Marriage fascinates me: how we negotiate its span, how we change within it, how it changes itself, and why some relationships survive and others do not. There isn't a single marriage that couldn't provide enough narrative arc for a novel.
Marriage is an indissoluble state of life wherein a man and a woman agree to give each other power over their bodies for the begetting, birth, and upbringing of offspring.