William Penn. (1644–1718). Fruits of Solitude.
The Harvard Classics. 1909–14.
Right Marriage
79. Never Marry but for Love; but see that thou lov’st what is lovely.
80. If Love be not thy chiefest Motive, thou wilt soon grow weary of a Married State, and stray from thy Promise, to search out thy Pleasures in forbidden Places.
81. Let not Enjoyment lessen, but augment Affection; it being the basest of Passions to like when we have not, what we slight when we possess.
82. It is the difference betwixt Lust and Love, that this is fixt, that volatile. Love grows, Lust wastes by Enjoyment: And the Reason is, that one springs from an Union of Souls, and the other from an Union of Sense.
83. They have Divers Originals, and so are of different Families: That inward and deep, this superficial; this transient, and that parmanent.
84. They that Marry for Money cannot have the true Satisfaction of Marriage; the requisite Means being wanting.
85. Men are generally more careful of the Breed of their Horses and Dogs than of their Children.
86. Those must be of the best Sort, for Shape, Strength, Courage and good Conditions: But as for these, their own Posterity, Money shall answer all Things. With such, it makes the Crooked Streight, sets Squint-Eyes Right, cures Madness, covers Folly, changes ill Conditions, mends the Skin, gives a sweet Breath, repairs Honors, makes Young, works Wonders.
87. O how sordid is Man grown! Man, the noblest Creature in the World, as a God on Earth, and the Image of him that made it; thus to mistake Earth for Heaven, and worship Gold for God!