Keeping Love Alive, June 18
            
            
              Wives, submit yourselves unto your own husbands, as it is fit in the Lord.
            
            
              Husbands, love your wives, and be not bitter against them.
            
            
              Colossians 3:18,
            
            
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              .
            
            
              How much trouble and what a tide of woe and unhappiness would be saved
            
            
              if men, and women also, would continue to cultivate the regard, attention, and
            
            
              kind words of appreciation and little courtesies of life which kept love alive and
            
            
              which they felt were necessary in gaining the companions of their choice. If the
            
            
              husband and wife would only continue to cultivate these attentions which nourish
            
            
              love, they would be happy in each other’s society and would have a sanctifying
            
            
              influence upon their families. They would have in themselves a little world of
            
            
              happiness and would not desire to go outside this world for new attractions and
            
            
              new objects of love....
            
            
              Many women pine for words of love and kindness and the common attentions
            
            
              and courtesies due them from their husbands who have selected them as their life
            
            
              companions.... It is these little attentions and courtesies which make up the sum
            
            
              of life’s happiness....
            
            
              If the hearts were kept tender in our families, if there were a noble, generous
            
            
              deference to each other’s tastes and opinions, if the wife were seeking opportunities
            
            
              to express her love by actions in her courtesies to her husband, and the husband
            
            
              were manifesting the same consideration and kindly regard for the wife, the
            
            
              children would partake of the same spirit. The influence would pervade the
            
            
              household, and what a tide of misery would be saved in the families! ...
            
            
              Every couple who unite their life interest should seek to make the life of
            
            
              each as happy as possible. That which we prize we seek to preserve and make
            
            
              more valuable if we can. In the marriage contract men and women have made
            
            
              a trade, an investment for life, and they should do their utmost to control their
            
            
              words of impatience and fretfulness, even more carefully than they did before
            
            
              their marriage, for now their destinies are united for life as husband and wife, and
            
            
              each is valued in exact proportion to the amount of painstaking effort put forth to
            
            
              retain and keep fresh the love so eagerly sought for and prized before marriage.
            
            
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