Sometimes men get married and then there’s day after day, stretching out into an entire lifetime, and they get pretty well bored by it all.
 Émile Zola, L'Assommoir (1877). copy citation

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Author Émile Zola
Source L'Assommoir
Topic stretching
Date 1877
Language English
Reference
Note
Weblink https://www.gutenberg.org/files/8600/8600-h/8600-h.htm

Context

““I don’t want you to be able to accuse me later on of having incited you to do a foolish thing. You shouldn’t be so insistent, Monsieur Coupeau. You can’t really be sure that you’re in love with me. If you didn’t see me for a week, it might fade away. Sometimes men get married and then there’s day after day, stretching out into an entire lifetime, and they get pretty well bored by it all. Sit down there; I’m willing to talk it over at once.” Then until one in the morning, in the dark room and by the faint light of a smoky tallow candle which they forgot to snuff, they talked of their marriage, lowering their voices so as not to wake the two children, Claude and Etienne, who were sleeping, both heads on the same pillow.” source