You are now in the Quotes about Wedding, Aphorisms about Wedding, Maxims about Wedding, Sentences about Wedding - These are very closely related terms, but they differ from each other and so we will briefly introduce you their differences. Quotes are citations of someone else’s words, whilst Aphorisms and Maxims are short, witty, one-sentence statements expressing philosophical thoughts or life truths. On the Cardsland website you will find Quotes, Aphorisms, Maxims of many famous people, as well as those less famous authors. We invite you to browse the quotes and aphorisms we collected, because except finding the fundamental truths in them, you can also easily add them to free e-cards from our site. For your convenience the quotes have been divided into appropriate categories. If you know an interesting quote, aphorism or maxim, you can add them to the Cardsland service without a problem; however, first you need to sign up for a free User Account. We wish you nice and pleasant read; then choose Quotes about Wedding, Aphorisms about Wedding, Maxims about Wedding, Sentences about Wedding and send free ecards to friends.
A bachelor May thrive by observation on a little, A single life's no burthen: but to draw In yokes is chargeable, and will require A double maintenance.
- quote by John Ford
A bad marriage is like an electrical thrilling machine: it makes you dance, but you can't let go.
- quote by Ambrose Bierce
A contract executed without any part performance.
- quote by Lord Brougham
A gentleman who had been very unhappy in marriage, married immediately after his wife died: Johnson said, it was the triumph of hope over experience.
- quote by Samuel Johnson
A husband is what is left of a lover, after the nerve has been extracted.
- quote by Helen Rowland
A marriage so free, so spontaneous, that it would allow of wide excursions of the pair from each other, in common or even in separate objects of work and interest, and yet would hold them all the time in the bond of absolute sympathy, would by its very freedom be all the more poignantly attractive, and by its very scope and breadth all the richer and more vital -- would be in a sense indestructible.
- quote by Edward Carpenter
- quote by Calderon
A world-without-end bargain.
- quote by William Shakespeare
An unhappy gentleman, resolving to wed nothing short of perfection, keeps his heart and hand till both get so old and withered that no tolerable woman will accept them.
- quote by Nathaniel Hawthorne
And, to all married men, be this a caution, Which they should duly tender as their life, Neither to doat too much, nor doubt a wife.
- quote by Philip Massinger