Yes. On the other hand people on the opposite end of the spectrum no longer have any business marrying. This doesn’t sound romantic, but one of the purposes of marriage is to get sex drive under control, for people who wouldn’t bear to become ‘eunuchs for the sake of Heaven’. This is what makes me reluctant to question the readiness of the average person with control issues. Marriage is not a boon for elites, it’s as common as bread or potatoes, a thing for common. But yes, one is supposed to be capable of remaining faithful, and marriage shouldn’t be about just getting a sex partner either.
Can’t, for geographical reasons. Cross-continental shipment, taxes, customs and forex rates generally make American books a costly affair in my neck of the woods.
I haven’t read the actual books and won’t criticize them. However, the reaction I described in reference to courtship is quite literal — it really means that whenever I heard the word said, I cringe. Actually, I never hear it said, I only ever read it, but anyway.
When courtship talk starts I half expect people to fall into that unmistakable scholastic/chastising/preachy tone of a specific brand of 1850 English. It could theoretically be modern (and obviously it technically is, because they’ve just written it), but it’s like 200 years back and not really graceful about it. ‘Cheerfully accede to her husband’s wishes… admit her to his counsels… bla bla bla.,’ the blood-curdling liver-rending language that sends shivers down everybody’s spine who was not homeschooled from books printed in the 19th century. It makes me need a glass or two of Jack. I can write like that effortleslly, but in most cases I cringe at the thought, even if I’m writing some highly philosophical or legal stuff; there’s nearly always a better, more sensible way to write.
… And the same is true about the non-verbal customs and codes of behaviour. The stilted etiquette and elaborately enacted protocol that makes you think of a freaking Asian court… Ugh. I’m generally a history enthusiast and familiar with symbolics going far beyond the Victorian Era. I’ve
used it myself when it’s been proper — and natural. But I normally don’t want to go there. Because it’s not natural. It’s stilted, it’s artificial, it’s not… human for it. And
human act is a reference people who have the mind for that sort of thing should be able to understand in the context of marriage.
Ugh. Sorry. Ranting again.