Ideal Marriage Quotes
Collection of top 17 famous quotes about Ideal Marriage
Ideal Marriage Quotes & Sayings
Happy to read and share the best inspirational Ideal Marriage quotes, sayings and quotations on Wise Famous Quotes.
Our Heavenly Father wants our hearts to be knit together. That union in love is not simply an ideal. It is a necessity
— Henry B. Eyring
For me, marriage is a grotesque, unforgiving, clunky contrivance. Yet society pushes it as a shimmering ideal.
— George Meyer
That a marriage ends is less than ideal; but all things end under heaven, and if temporality is held to be invalidating, then nothing real succeeds.
— John Updike
An ideal wife is any woman who has an ideal husband.
— Booth Tarkington
The ideal husband understands every word his wife doesn't say.
— Alfred Hitchcock
If you can't ignore imperfections, then your imaginary ideal soulmate will always remain pending till you grow old and die.
— Michael Bassey Johnson
He is not an ideal husband. I am his wife.
— Ljupka Cvetanova
An ideal wife is one who remains faithful to you but tries to be just as charming as if she weren't.
— Sacha Guitry
My parents' long and happy marriage was a great ideal to live up to, but a tough one.
— Olivia Williams
Love is an ideal thing, marriage a real thing; a confusion of the real with the ideal never goes unpunished.
— Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe
The concept of romantic love as a widely accepted cultural value and as the ideal basis of marriage was a product of the nineteenth century.
— Nathaniel Branden
Love is an ideal. A false hope. Marriage is the reality. And like all realities it is painful.
— Anonymous
I don't know why togetherness was ever held up as an ideal of marriage. Away from home for both, then together, that's much better.
— Carolyn Heilbrun
The ideal mother, like the ideal marriage, is a fiction.
— Milton Sapirstein
A long marriage is very unifying, even if it's not ideal, and those old structures must be respected.
— Iris Murdoch
There is one thing worse than an absolutely loveless marriage: a marriage in which there is love, but on one side only.
— Oscar Wilde