
Christian History Home > Issue 56 > Finding a Useful Wife

Finding a Useful Wife
Bachelor Livingstone's unromantic stroll into marriage.
Ted Olsen | posted 10/01/1997 12:00AM
Although romance was far less a factor in marriage for nineteenth-century couples than it is today, the unmarried Livingstone seemed even less romantic than most.
Before he married, he prided himself on his celibacy and singleness. When his London Missionary Society (LMS) application asked simply for his marital status, for example, Livingstone wrote a mammoth reply: "Unmarried; under no engagement related to marriage, never made proposals of marriage, nor conducted myself so to any woman as to cause her to suspect that I intended anything related to marriage."
Livingstone was not against marriage as an institution. He simply believed it was something best left to others. The only reason he would marry, he wrote a friend, would be to further his cause. "But whether my usefulness will be augmented by getting a wife," he wrote, "I really don't know."
Pressed to marry
While he lived in a missionary community, however, the issue refused to be left alone. Letters from friends back home pressed ... To view this item, you must be a member of ChristianHistory.net.
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