Gender Roles of Husband and Wife in the Home - Based on 1880s Gentleman’s 
	Etiquette Manual
	
	BY EPOCH 
	INSPIRED STAFF, JULY 
	4, 2022  
	- 
	
	www.theepochtimes.com/gender-roles-of-husband-and-wife-in-the-home-based-on-1880s-gentlemans-etiquette-manual_4573890.html
	
	
	The husband, in fact, should act toward his wife as becomes a perfect 
	gentleman, regarding her as the “best lady in the land,” to whom, above all 
	other earthly beings, he owes paramount allegiance. 
	
	
	HOME is 
	the woman’s kingdom, and there she reigns supreme. To embellish that home, 
	to make happy the lives of her husband and the dear ones committed to her 
	trust, is the honored task which it is the wife’s province to perform. All 
	praise be to her who so rules and governs in that kingdom, that those reared 
	beneath her roof “shall rise up and call her blessed.”
	
	
	A HOME.
	
	After marriage one of the first requirements for happiness is a home. This 
	can seldom be found in a boarding house or at a hotel, and not always 
	beneath the parental roof of either husband or wife. It will oftenest be 
	found in a house or even a cottage apart from the immediate association of 
	relatives or friends, acquaintances or strangers, and here husband and wife 
	may begin in reality, that new life of which they have had fond dreams; and 
	upon their own actions must depend their future welfare.
	
	
	HOME COMPANIONSHIP.
	
	Husband and wife should remember, when starting out upon their newly wedded 
	life, that they are to be life companions, that the affection they have 
	possessed and expressed as lovers must ripen into a life-long devotion to 
	one another’s welfare and happiness, that the closest friendship must be 
	begotten from their early love, and that each must live and work for the 
	other. They must seek to be congenial companions to each other, so that 
	every hour they pass together will be mutually enjoyable. They should aim to 
	have the same tastes so that what one enjoys will be alike enjoyable to the 
	other, and what is distasteful to one shall be no less so to the other. Each 
	should yield in matters where it is right to yield, and be firm only where 
	duty is concerned. With a firm trust in one another they should ever abide, 
	that each may say to the world, “I possess one on whose character and 
	heart I can lean as upon a rock.”
	
	
	CONDUCT OF HUSBAND AND WIFE.
	
	Let neither ever deceive the other, or do anything to shake the other’s 
	confidence, for once deceived, the heart can never wholly trust again. 
	Fault-finding should only be done by gentle and mild criticism, and then 
	with loving words and pleasant looks. Make allowances for one another’s 
	weaknesses, and at the same time endeavor to mutually repress them. For the 
	sake of mutual improvement the husband and wife should receive and give 
	corrections to one another in a spirit of kindness, and in doing so they 
	will prepare themselves for the work God gives the parents of training lives 
	for usefulness here and hereafter. Their motto should be “faithful unto 
	death in all things,” and they must exercise forbearance with each other’s 
	peculiarities.
	
	Let both preserve a strict guard over their tongues, that neither may utter 
	anything rude, contemptuous or severe, and guard their tempers, that neither 
	may ever grow passionate or become sullen or morose in one another’s 
	presence. They should not expect too much from each other; if either 
	offends, it is the part of the other to forgive, remembering that no one is 
	free from faults, and that we are all constantly erring.
	
	If, perchance, after they have entered upon the stern realities of life, 
	they find, that they have made a mistake, that they are not well mated, then 
	they must accept the inevitable and endure to the end, “for better or for 
	worse;” for only in this way can they find consolation for having found out, 
	when too late, that they were unfitted for a life-long companionship. A 
	journalist has said: “No lessons learned by experience, however sharply 
	taught and sadly earned, can enlighten the numbed senses which love has sent 
	to sleep by its magic fascination; and things as plain as the sun in heaven 
	to others are dark as night, unfathomable as the sea, to those who let 
	themselves love before they prove.”
	
	
	DUTIES OF THE WIFE TO HER HUSBAND.
	
	The wife should remember that upon her, to the greatest extent, devolves the 
	duty of making home happy. She should do nothing to make her husband feel 
	uncomfortable, either mentally or physically, but on the other hand she 
	should strive to the utmost of her ability to do whatever is best calculated 
	to please him, continually showing him that her love, plighted upon the 
	altar, remains steadfast, and that no vicissitudes of fortune can change or 
	diminish it.
	
	She should never indulge in fits of temper, hysterics, or other habits of 
	ill-breeding, which, though easy to conquer at first, grow and strengthen 
	with indulgence, if she would retain her husband as her lover and her 
	dearest and nearest friend. She should be equally as neat and tidy 
	respecting her dress and personal appearance at home as when she appears in 
	society, and her manners towards 
	her husband should be as kind and pleasing when alone with him as when in 
	company. She should bear in mind that to retain the good opinion of her 
	husband is worth far more than to gain the good opinion of hundreds of the 
	devotees of society, and that as she possesses the love and confidence of 
	her husband, so will she receive the respect and esteem of all his friends.
	
	She should be careful not to confide to another any small misunderstandings 
	or petty quarrels between herself and husband, should any occur. This is the 
	surest method of widening any breach of harmony that may occur between 
	husband and wife, for the more such misunderstandings are talked about, and 
	the more advice she receives from her confidants, there is less probability 
	that harmonious relations will be speedily resumed.
	
	
	THE WIFE A HELPMATE.
	
	A wife should act openly and honorably in regard to money matters, keeping 
	an exact account of her expenditures, and carefully guarding against any 
	extravagances; and while her husband is industriously at work, she should 
	seek to encourage him, by her own frugality, to be economical, thrifty, 
	enterprising and prosperous in his business, that he may be better enabled, 
	as years go by and family cares press more heavily on each, to afford all 
	the comforts and perhaps some of the luxuries of a happy home. No condition 
	is hopeless when the wife possesses firmness, decision and economy, and no 
	outward prosperity can counteract indolence, folly and extravagance at home. 
	She should consult the disposition and tastes of her husband, and endeavor 
	to lead him to high and noble thoughts, lofty aims, and temporal comfort; be 
	ever ready to welcome him home, and in his companionship draw his thoughts 
	from business and lead him to the enjoyment of home comforts and happiness. 
	The influence of a good wife over her husband may be very great, if she 
	exerts it in the right direction. She should, above all things, study to 
	learn the disposition of her husband, and if, perchance, she finds herself 
	united to a man of quick and violent temper, the utmost discretion, as well 
	as perfect equanimity on her own part is required, for she should have such 
	perfect control over herself as to calm his perturbed spirits.
	
	
	A HUSBAND’S DUTIES.
	
	It must not be supposed that it devolves upon the wife alone to make married 
	life and home happy. She must be seconded in her noble efforts by him who 
	took her from her own parental fireside and kind friends, to be his 
	companion through life’s pilgrimage. He has placed her in a new home, 
	provided with such comforts as his means permit, and the whole current of 
	both their lives have been changed. His constant duty to his wife is to be 
	ever kind and attentive, to love her as he loves himself, even sacrificing 
	his own personal comfort for her happiness. From his affection for her, 
	there should grow out a friendship and fellowship, such as is possessed for 
	no other person. His evenings and spare moments should be devoted to her, 
	and these should be used for their intellectual, moral and social 
	advancement.
	
	The cares and anxieties of business should not exclude the attentions due to 
	wife and family, while he should carefully keep her informed of the 
	condition of his business affairs. Many a wife is capable of giving her 
	husband important advice about various details of his business, and if she 
	knows the condition of his pecuniary affairs, she will be able to govern her 
	expenditures accordingly.
	
	It is the husband’s duty to join with his wife in all her endeavors to 
	instruct her children, to defer all matters pertaining to their discipline 
	to her, aiding her in this respect as she requires it. In household matters 
	the wife rules predominant, and he should never interfere with her authority 
	and government in this sphere. It is his duty and should be his pleasure to 
	accompany her to church, to social gatherings, to lectures and such places 
	of entertainment as they both mutually enjoy and appreciate. In fact he 
	ought not to attend a social gathering unless accompanied by his wife, nor 
	go to an evening entertainment without her. If it is not a fit place for his 
	wife to attend, neither is it fit for him.
	
	While he should give his wife his perfect confidence in her faithfulness, 
	trusting implicitly to her honor at all times and in all places, he should, 
	on his part, remain faithful and constant to her, and give her no cause of 
	complaint. He should pass by unnoticed any disagreeable peculiarities and 
	mistakes, taking care at the proper time, and without giving offense, to 
	remind her of them, with the idea of having her correct them. He should 
	never seek to break her of any disagreeable habits or peculiarities she may 
	possess, by ridiculing them. He should encourage her in all her schemes for 
	promoting the welfare of her household, or in laudable endeavors to promote 
	the happiness of others, by engaging in such works of benevolence and 
	charity as the duties of her home will allow her to perform.
	
	The husband, in fact, should act toward his wife as becomes a perfect 
	gentleman, regarding her as the “best lady in the land,” to whom, above all 
	other earthly beings, he owes paramount allegiance. If he so endeavors to 
	act, his good sense and judgment will dictate to him the many little 
	courtesies which are due her, and which every good wife cannot fail to 
	appreciate. The observance of the rules of politeness are nowhere more 
	desirable than in the domestic circle, between husband and wife, parents and 
	children.
	
	
	The above is an excerpt from “Our Deportment,” a code of manners for refined 
	society by John H. Young A.M., published in 1881. We offer it in hopes of 
	promoting gentlemanly conduct among men—young and older—in today’s world.
