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Desultory thoughts and reflections

Chapter 340: MARRIAGE.
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About This Book

A collection of short meditations and aphorisms offering compact observations on human character, feeling, and conduct. It treats topics such as love, youth and age, society and politeness, conscience, gratitude, music, contemplation, and the hardening effects of experience. The tone is epigrammatic and reflective, often paradoxical, combining moral insight with personal impression rather than systematic argument. Entries are brief, titled reflections that shift between practical maxims and lyrical observation, inviting readers to reconsider familiar sentiments from fresh angles.

MARRIAGE.

How many in the married state we find
Wedded in person, but divorced in mind!
Unnatural union! fraught with as much dread
As when the living chain’d were to the dead
By stern Mezentius; yet less cruel he,—
As many slaves of Hymen will agree,—
For but one victim suffer’d from the chain,
While wedlock gives the two an equal pain.