Somerset Maugham Fullscreen Marriage of convenience (1884)

Pause

Geneva is besides a charming city.

Do not waste a minute, but go there and I will give you a letter to my wife's nieces.'

It was she who summed up the story.

'The fact is that in a marriage of convenience you expect less and so you are less likely to be disappointed.

As you do not make senseless claims on one another there is no reason for exasperation.

You do not look for perfection and so you are tolerant to one another's faults.

Passion is all very well, but it is not a proper foundation for marriage.

Voyez-vous, for two people to be happy in marriage they must be able to respect one another, they must be of the same condition, and their interests must be alike; then if they are decent people and are willing to give and take, to live and let live, there is no reason why their union should not be as happy as ours.'

She paused.

'But, of course, my husband is a very, very remarkable man.'