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ROMANCE AND REALITY.
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by your children! The husband dies—the wife piously submits to the Divine will—Providence supports her wonderfully through it—her child dies of the measles or hooping-cough—and the mother goes to Hastings and dies too."

Lord Mandeville.—"What is the reason that many die of the loss of a beloved object before marriage, but never after? The lover cannot survive the mistress, nor the mistress the lover: but the husband or the wife survive each other to a good old age."

Mr. Trevyllian.—"Curiosity is its own suicide; and what is love but curiosity? Marriage enables us to make proof of the happiness which was but an idea before. With love, knowledge is destruction; and as for the individuals, who can expect them to die of a disease that is extinct?"

Edward Lorraine.—"No sin in love is so great as inconstancy, because it unidealises it. The crime of sacrilege is not in the mere theft of the golden images from the high places—it is in afterwards applying them to base and common uses. Love and faith both require the ideal to make them holy."

Lady Mandeville (whispering Edward).—"We never understand the full heinousness of a crime unless we commit it."