Thence come apparent love, friendship, and favor between marriedpartners, n. 278.
2
This accounts for the joyless, pleasureless life of many marriedpartners.
3
Marriage also induces other forms in the souls and minds of marriedpartners, n. 192.
4
There are various similitudes and dissimilitudes, both internal and external, with marriedpartners, n. 227.
5
Of external causes of cold the third is, a striving for preeminence between marriedpartners, n. 248.
6
The moment two marriedpartners begin the work of coercion and punishment, that moment love begins to fail.
7
Wisdom and love are marriedpartners.
8
They did not even show that fondness for each other which is so beautiful a trait in young marriedpartners.
9
Love truly conjugial may exist with one of the marriedpartners, and not at the same time with the other, n. 226.
10
To what has been above related concerning the state of marriedpartners after death, it may be expedient to add the following circumstances.
11
That the communications of love and its delights between marriedpartners are effected by the sense of the touch has been occasionally proved above.
12
The love of infants and children is different with spiritual marriedpartners from what it is with natural, n. 405-407.
13
If the union be harmonious-internallyso, I mean-peace, joy, interior delight will go on, finding daily increase-ifinharmonious, eternal discord will curse the marriedpartners.
14
Jealousy, with marriedpartners who do not love each other, is grounded in several causes; arising in some instances from various mental weaknesses, n. 373-375.
15
Marriedpartners, according to these conjunctions, become one man more and more, n. 177.
16
Marriedpartners, who have lived in truly conjugial love, are not separated in the death of one of them.