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A bride at her second marriage does not wear a veil. She wants to see what she is getting.
Helen Rowland
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Helen Rowland
Age: 74 †
Born: 1875
Born: January 1
Died: 1950
Died: January 1
Humorist
Journalist
Wedding
Wear
Marriage
Second
Wants
Bride
Getting
Brides
Doe
Veil
Love
Veils
More quotes by Helen Rowland
A man seldom thinks of marrying when he meets his ideal woman he waits until he gets the marrying fever and then idealizes the first woman he happens to meet.
Helen Rowland
Eve had one advantage over all the rest of her sex. In his wildest moments of rage Adam never could accuse her of being 'just like her mother!
Helen Rowland
In love, somehow, a man's heart is always either exceeding the speed limit, or getting parked in the wrong place.
Helen Rowland
Marriage is a bargain, and somebody has to get the worst end of the bargain.
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A man never knows how to say goodbye a woman never knows when to say it.
Helen Rowland
Some women blush when they are kissed, some call for the police, some swear, some bite. But the worst are those who laugh.
Helen Rowland
There's so much saint in the worst of them, and so much devil in the best of them, that a woman who's married to one of them, has nothing to learn of the rest of them.
Helen Rowland
And verily, a woman need know but one man well, in order to understand all men whereas a man may know all women and understand not one of them.
Helen Rowland
It is as hard to get a man to stay at home after you've married him as it was to get him to go home before you married him.
Helen Rowland
When a man makes a woman his wife it's the highest compliment he can pay her – and usually it's the last.
Helen Rowland
Every man wants a woman to appeal to his better side, his nobler instincts, and his higher nature - and another woman to help him forget them.
Helen Rowland
Going through life without love is like going through a good dinner without an appetite -- everything seems so flat and tasteless.
Helen Rowland
A man's ideal woman is the one he couldn't get.
Helen Rowland
Love is a matter of give and take -- marriage, a matter of misgive and mistake.
Helen Rowland
A husband is what is left of a lover, after the nerve has been extracted.
Helen Rowland
At twenty, a man feels awfully aged and blasé at thirty, almost senile at forty, not so old and at fifty, positively skittish.
Helen Rowland
A good woman is known by what she does a good man by what he doesn't.
Helen Rowland
Home is any four walls that enclose the right person.
Helen Rowland
A bachelor never quite gets over the idea that he is a thing of beauty and a boy forever.
Helen Rowland
Life begins at 40 - but so do fallen arches, rheumatism, faulty eyesight, and the tendency to tell a story to the same person, three or four times.
Helen Rowland