Elizabeth Towne's Happiness and Marriage is a New Thought treatment of domestic life, personal character, emotional discipline, and spiritual partnership. Written from within the early twentieth-century New Thought movement, the book approaches marriage not merely as a social arrangement but as a field of inner development, mutual influence, self-command, and practical idealism. Towne's argument is rooted in the belief that thought, attitude, habit, and spiritual poise shape the atmosphere of the home and the quality of married life.
Practical, direct, and characteristic of Towne's wider writing on self-culture, health, success, and mental discipline, Happiness and Marriage belongs with classic New Thought literature concerned with everyday life rather than abstract doctrine alone. It will be of interest to readers of early self-help, metaphysical religion, women's spiritual writing, marriage and domestic conduct literature, and the history of positive thinking. Towne's voice is firm, reform-minded, and quietly radical in its insistence that happiness in marriage requires conscious personal growth rather than mere conformity to convention.
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