<SPAN name="To_Edna_Gordon"></SPAN>
<h2>To Edna Gordon</h2>
<p class="c3">During Her Honeymoon<br/>
</p>
<p>I am very much flattered that you should write your first letter
as Mrs. Gordon to me. Its receipt was a surprise, as I have known
you so slightly—only when we were both guests under a friend's roof
for one week.
</p>
<p>I had no idea that you were noticing me particularly at that
time, there was such a merry crowd of younger people about you. How
careful we matrons should be, when in the presence of
débutantes, for it seems they are taking notes for future
reference!
</p>
<p>I am glad that my behaviour and conversation were such that you
feel you can ask me for instructions at this important period of
your life. Here is the text you have given me:
</p>
<p>"<i>I want you to tell me, dear Mrs. West, how to be as happy,
and loved, and loving, after fifteen years of married life, as you
are. I so dread the waning of my honeymoon</i>."
</p>
<p>And now you want me to preach you a little sermon on this text.
Well, my dear girl, I am at a disadvantage in not knowing you
better, and not knowing your husband at all.
</p>
<p>Husbands are like invalids, each needs a special prescription,
according to his ailment.
</p>
<p>But as all invalids can be benefited by certain sensible
suggestions, like taking simple food, and breathing and exercising
properly, and sleeping with open windows or out-of-doors, so all
husbands can be aided toward perpetual affection by the observance
of some general laws, on the part of the wife.
</p>
<p>I am, of course, to take it for granted that you have married a
man with principles and ideals, a man who loves you and desires to
make a good husband. I know you were not so unfortunate as to
possess a large amount of property for any man to seek, and so I
can rely upon the natural supposition that you were married for
love.
</p>
<p>It might be worth your while, right now, while your husband's
memory is fresh upon the subject, to ask him what particular
characteristics first won his attention, and what caused him to
select you for a life companion.
</p>
<p>Up to the present moment, perhaps, he has never told you any
more substantial reason for loving you than the usual lovers'
explanation—"Just because." But if you ask him to think it over, I
am sure he can give you a more explicit answer.
</p>
<p>After you have found what qualities, habits, actions, or
accomplishments attracted him, write them down in a little book and
refer to them two or three times a year. On these occasions ask
yourself if you are keeping these attractions fresh and bright as
they were in the days of courtship. Women easily drop the things
which won a man's heart, and are unconscious that the change they
bemoan began in themselves. But do not imagine you can rest at ease
after marriage with only the qualities, and charms, and virtues,
which won you a lover. To keep a husband in love is a more serious
consideration than to win a lover.
</p>
<p>You must add year by year to your attractions.
</p>
<p>As the deep bloom of first youth passes, you must cultivate
mental and spiritual traits which will give your face a lustre from
within.
</p>
<p>And as the mirth and fun of life drifts farther from you, and
you find the merry jest, which of old turned care into laughter,
less ready on your lip, you must cultivate a wholesome optimistic
view of life, to sustain your husband through the trials and
disasters besetting most mortal paths.
</p>
<p>Make one solemn resolve now, and never forget it. Say to
yourself, "On no other spot, in no other house on earth, shall my
husband find a more cheerful face, a more loving welcome, or a more
restful atmosphere, than he finds at home."
</p>
<p>No matter what vicissitudes arise, and what complications occur,
keep that resolve. It will at least help to sustain you with a
sense of self-respect, if unhappiness from any outside source
should shadow your life. An attractive home has become a sort of
platitude in speech, but it remains a thing of vital importance,
all the same, in actual life and in marriage.
</p>
<p>Think often and speak frequently to your husband of his good
qualities and of the things you most admire in him.
</p>
<p>Sincere and judicious praise is to noble nature like spring rain
and sun to the earth. Ignore or make light of his small failings,
and when you must criticize a serious fault, do not dwell upon it.
A husband and wife should endeavour to be such good friends that
kindly criticism is accepted as an evidence of mutual love which
desires the highest attainments for its object.
</p>
<p>But no man likes to think his wife has set about the task of
making him over, and if you have any such intention I beg you to
conceal it, and go about it slowly and with caution.
</p>
<p>A woman who knows how to praise more readily than she knows how
to criticize, and who has the tact and skill to adapt herself to a
man's moods and to find amusement and entertainment in his whims,
can lead him away from their indulgence without his knowledge.
</p>
<p>Such women are the real reformers of men, though they scorn the
word, and disclaim the effort.
</p>
<p>It is well to keep a man conscious that you are a refined and
delicate-minded woman, yet do not insist upon being worshipped on a
pedestal. It tires a man's neck to be for ever gazing upward, and
statues are less agreeable companions than human beings.
</p>
<p>If you wish to be thought spotless marble, instead of warm flesh
and blood, you should have gone into a museum, and refused
marriage. Remember God knew what He was about, when He fashioned
woman to be man's companion, mate, and mother of his children.
</p>
<p>Respect yourself in all those capacities, and regard the
fulfilment of each duty as sacred and beautiful.
</p>
<p>Do not thrust upon the man's mind continually the idea that you
are a vastly higher order of being than he is.
</p>
<p>He will reach your standard much sooner if you come half-way and
meet him on the plane of common sense and human understanding.
Meantime let him never doubt your abhorrence of vulgarity, and your
distaste for the familiarity which breeds contempt.
</p>
<p>It is a great art, when a wife knows how to attract a husband
year after year, with the allurements of the boudoir, and never to
disillusion him with the familiarities of the dressing-room.
</p>
<p>Such women there are, who have lived with their lovers in
poverty's close quarters, and through sickness and trouble, and yet
have never brushed the bloom from the fruit of romance. But she who
needs to be told in what this art consists, would never understand,
and she who understands, need not be told.
</p>
<p>Keep your husband certain of the fact that his attention and
society is more agreeable to you than that of any other man. But
never beg for his attentions, and do not permit him to think you
are incapable of enjoying yourself without his playing the devoted
cavalier.
</p>
<p>The moment a man feels such an attitude is compulsory, it
becomes irksome. Learn how to entertain yourself. Cling to your
accomplishments and add others. A man admires a progressive woman
who keeps step with the age. Study, and think, and read, and
cultivate the art of listening. This will make you interesting to
men and women alike, and your husband will hear you praised as an
agreeable and charming woman, and that always pleases a man, as it
indicates his good taste and good luck.
</p>
<p>Avoid giving your husband the impression that you expect a
detailed account of every moment spent away from you. Convince him
that you believe in his honour and loyalty, and that you have no
desire to control or influence his actions in any matters which do
not conflict with his self-respect or your pride.
</p>
<p>Cultivate the society of the women he admires. There is both
wisdom and tact in such a course.
</p>
<p>Wisdom in making an ideal a reality, and tact in avoiding any
semblance of that most unbecoming fault—jealousy.
</p>
<p>Let him see that you have absolute faith in your own powers to
hold him, and that you respect him too much to mistake a frank
admiration for an unworthy sentiment. Do not hesitate to speak with
equal frankness of the qualities you admire in other men. Educate
him in liberality and generosity, by example.
</p>
<p>Allow no one to criticize him in your presence, and do not
discuss his weaknesses with others. I have known wives to meet in
conclaves, and dissect husbands for an entire afternoon. And each
wife seemed anxious to pose as the most neglected and unappreciated
woman of the lot. With all the faults of the sterner sex, I never
heard of such a caucus of husbands.
</p>
<p>Take an interest in your husband's business affairs, and
sympathize with the cares and anxieties which beset him. Distract
his mind with pleasant or amusing conversation, when you find him
nervous and fagged in brain and body.
</p>
<p>Yet do not feel that you must never indicate any trouble of your
own, for it is conducive to selfishness when a wife hides all her
worries and indispositions to listen to those of her husband. But
since the work-a-day world, outside the home, is usually filled
with irritations for a busy man, it should be a wife's desire to
make his home-coming a season of anticipation and joy.
</p>
<p>Do not expect a husband to be happy and contented with a
continuous diet of love and sentiment and romance. He needs also
much that is practical and commonplace mingled with his mental
food.
</p>
<p>I have known an adoring young wife to irritate Cupid so he went
out and sat on the door-step, contemplating flight, by continual
neglect of small duties.
</p>
<p>There were never any matches in the receivers; when the husband
wanted one he was obliged to search the house. The newspaper he had
folded and left ready to read at leisure was used to light the
fire, although an overfilled waste-basket stood near. The
towel-rack was empty just when he wanted his bath, and his bedroom
slippers were always kicked so far under the bed that he was
obliged to crawl on all fours to reach them.
</p>
<p>Then his loving spouse was sure to want to be "cuddled" when he
was smoking his cigar and reading,—a triple occupation only
possible to a human freak, with three arms, four eyes, and two
mouths.
</p>
<p>Therefore I would urge you, my dear Edna, to mingle the
practical with the ideal, and common sense with sentiment, and tact
with affection, in your domestic life.
</p>
<p>These general rules are all I can give to guide your barque into
the smooth, sea of marital happiness.
</p>
<p>It is a wide sea, with many harbours and ports, and no two ships
start from exactly the same point or take exactly the same course.
You will encounter rocks and reefs, perhaps, which my boat escaped,
and I have no chart to guide you away from those rocks.
</p>
<p>If I knew you better, and knew your husband at all, I might
steer you a little farther out of Honeymoon Bay into calm waters,
and tell you how to reef your sails, and how to tack at certain
junctures of the voyage, and with the wind in certain directions.
</p>
<p>But if you keep your heart full of love, your mind clear of
distrust, and your lips free from faultfinding, and if you pray for
guidance and light upon your way, I am sure you cannot miss the
course.
</p><hr class="c2">
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