The young couple first married on August 5, 1744, when Joseph was eight and Sarah six, and first ended their marriage six days later when Joseph refused to believe, to Sarah's frustration, that the stars were silver nails in the sky, pinning up the black nightscape. They remarried four days later, when Joseph left a note under the door of Sarah's parents' house: I have considered everything you told me, and I do believe that the stars are silver nails.
They ended their marriage again a year later, when Joseph was nine and Sarah seven, over a quarrel about the nature of the bottom of the river bed. A week later, they were remarried, including this time in their vows that they should love each other until death, regardless of the existence of the riverbed, the temperature of the river bed's bottom (should it exist), and the possible existence of starfish on the possibly existing riverbed.
They ended their marriage one hundred and twenty times throughout their lives and each time remarried with a longer list of vows. They were sixty and fifty-eight at their last marriage, only three weeks before Sarah died of heart failure and Joseph drowned himself in the bath. Their marriage contract still hangs over the door of the house they on-and-off shared-nailed to the top post and brushing against the welcome mat:
"It is with everlasting devotion that we, Joseph and Sarah L, reunite in the indestructible union of matrimony, promising love until death, with the understanding that the stars are silver nails in the sky, regardless of the existence of the bottom of the river, the temperature of this bottom (should it exist) and the possible existence of starfish on the possibly existing riverbed, overlooking what may or may not have been accidental grape juice spills, agreeing to forget that Joseph played sticks and balls with his friends when he promised he would help Sarah thread the needle for the quilt she was sewing, and that Sarah was supposed to give the quilt to Joseph, not his buddy, ignoring the simple fact that Joseph snores like a pig, and that Sarah is no great treat to sleep with either, letting slide certain tendencies of both parties to look too long at members of the opposite sex, not making a fuss over why Joseph is such a slob, leaving his clothes wherever he feels like taking them off, expecting Sarah to pick them up, clean them, and put them in their proper place as he should have, or why Sarah has to be such a pain about the smallest things, such as which way the toilet paper unrolls, or when dinner is five minutes later than she was planning, because, let's face it, it's Joseph who's putting that paper on the roll and dinner on the table, disregarding whether the beet is a better vegetable than the cabbage, putting aside the problems of being fat-headed and chronically unreasonable, trying to erase the memory of a long since expired rose bush that a certain someone was supposed to remember to water when his wife was visiting family, accepting the compromise of the way we have been, the way we are, and the way we will likely be. May we live together in unwavering love and good health. Amen."
. image from The Craft Department, via Lovely Morning
. text from Everything Is Illuminated by Jonathan Safran Foer via Pink India Ink (who is bloody hilarious. Go, read, if you don't already)
Wednesday, September 16, 2009
My favourite wedding reading
Labels:
Going to the Chapel,
Poetry
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Thank you Peonies! I've been hunting high and low for a reading that wasn't twee or OTT and that wouldn't make our guests throw up, but also something that reflected us (and that was from a book we had actually read) - and this is so perfect!! Plus, the man agrees with me, hooray! You've just made my day!
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Funny post...I wish I'd known of this when we got married... Maybe the husband and I should renew our vows..?
ReplyDeleteAnd you are right (I just peeked), she *is* hilarious. So thank you.
-maria
and that is real life..not the gush that is usually read
ReplyDeleteha! i really needed this today, thank you. :)
ReplyDeletevery sweet story, from one of my favourite films (im slightly ashamed ot say that I havn't read the book, although I do own it, I must try again)
ReplyDeleteLOVED reading this as I loved the book it's from. Cool that u pulled out this excerpt as it happens to have significant meaning for me right at this exact oment in my life..... thanks for reminding me..... :-)
ReplyDeleteJust great!
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing!
This is one of my favorite books, so it's lovely to be reminded of its beauty in a new context.
ReplyDeleteI love this... I remember reading Everything Is Illuminated and crying every few minutes over something Jonathan Safran Foer writes. It seems that everything he produces is perfect.
ReplyDeleteI'll definitely have to remember this if I ever get married.
Thats cute.
ReplyDeleteJust popped over to see about all the lovely traffic coming my way, and aren't you the sweetest. I'm so glad that reading resonates for others the way it did for me.
ReplyDeleteI love it! I have a list of favorite readings too. This might make the top 5 or so :)
ReplyDeletei read that book just this past summer, isn't it wonderful? have you read Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close? it's also very, very good :)
ReplyDelete<3
ReplyDeleteMmmm. I love this. I really like that last paragraph. May have to incorporate this somehow...
ReplyDeleteI have to read that. HAVE to.
ReplyDeletebeautiful. thanks.
ReplyDeleteI do love that passage, and I second the recommendation of "Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close."
ReplyDeleteYou find all the nicest things.
ReplyDeleteand I heart the things you do.
ah, i read this as my wedding speech at our reception. jsf love
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