A BACHELORS COMPLAINT OF THE BEHAVIOUR OF MARRIED
e taken for granted, not expressed.
tional. e o understand teries belonging to t better t o be made free of t t content s. If a single person presume to offer indifferent subject, ely silenced as an incompetent person. Nay, a young married lady of my acquaintance, nigion on o differ from ing t mode of breeding oysters for t, o ask end to kno sucters.
But o tures give to tle of a rarity c every street and blind alley s t people commonly abundance, -- t t are not blest least one of ten turn out ill, and defeat ts, taking to vicious courses, for my life tell one in a year, t be a pretext. But whey are so common -
I do not advert to t merit o t. But ural-born subjects, sed to bring our spices, myrrribute and ion, -- I do not see.
quot;Like as t, even so are t; so says t office in our Prayer-book appointed for t; ; So say I; but t let are t not to gall and stick us. I to be sure to ance, ake no notice of turn a deaf ear to t caresses), you are set doractable, morose, a er of caken ty manners, and set about in earnest to romp and play ext or oto be found for sending t of too noisy or boisterous, or Mr. -- does not like co you.
I could forgive toying s, if it gives t I t unreasonable to be called upon to love to love a en, indiscriminately,to love all tty dears, because children are so engaging.
I kno;Love me, love my dog:quot; t is not alicable, particularly if t upon you to tease you or snap at you in sport. But a dog or a less