Helen Rowland Quotes

Helen Rowland Quotes. Below is a collection of famous Helen Rowland quotes. Here you can find the most popular and greatest quotes by Helen Rowland. Share these quotations with your friends and family.

One man's folly is another man's wife.

By Helen Rowland
Nobody is quite so blase and sophisticated as a boy of nineteen who is just recovering from a baby grand passion

By Helen Rowland
Never trust a husband too far or a bachelor too near.

By Helen Rowland
Marriage is a bargain, and somebody has to get the worst of the bargain.

By Helen Rowland
For one man's chin is as rough as another's, and one man's lies are as smooth as another's

By Helen Rowland
Falling in love consists merely in uncorking the imagination and bottling the common-sense.

By Helen Rowland
Every man wants a woman to appeal to his better side, his nobler instincts, and his higher nature --- and another woman to help him forget them.

By Helen Rowland
Don't waste time trying to break a man's heart; be satisfied if you can just manage to chip it in a brand new place.

By Helen Rowland
Before marriage, a man declares that he would lay down his life to serve you after marriage, he won't even lay down his newspaper to talk to you.

By Helen Rowland
A woman's flattery may inflate a man's head a little; but her criticism goes straight to his heart, and contracts it so that it can never again hold quite as much love for her.

By Helen Rowland
A man's folly is another man's wife.

By Helen Rowland
A husband is what is left of the lover after the nerve has been extracted.

By Helen Rowland
A good woman is known by what she does; a good man by what he doesn't.

By Helen Rowland
A bachelor never quite gets ove the idea that he is a thing of beauty and a boy forever.

By Helen Rowland
A bride at her second marriage does not wear a veil. She wants to see what she is getting.

By Helen Rowland
France may claim the happiest marriages in the world, but the happiest divorces in the world are made in America.

By Helen Rowland
A husband is what's left of the lover after the nerve has been extracted.

By Helen Rowland
After marriage, a woman's sight becomes so keen that she can see right through her husband without looking at him, and a man's so dull that he can look right through his wife without seeing her.

By Helen Rowland
When a girl marries, she exchanges the attentions of all the other men of her acquaintance for the inattention of just one.

By Helen Rowland
It takes a woman twenty years to make a man of her son, and another woman twenty minutes to make a fool of him.

By Helen Rowland
Marriage is the operation by which a woman's vanity and a man's egotism are extracted without an anaesthetic.

By Helen Rowland