SEPARATE HOMES.
HONEYMOON ALONE.
A "PERFECT MARRIAGE."
(Special.— Br Air Mail.)
LONDON, April 24
Seven years of experiment have pr«-j t . duced the "perfect marriage" for a p couple who parted —for a while —after s their wedding- s Captain Richard Wyndheni —writer. 0 -artist, traveller—left his bride at the p church door seven years ago and went on his honeymoon alone. The bride, j Miss Margaret he Ingrid Andrea Wulfs- ( berg, a pretty red-headed Norwegian, stayed in London. When Captain Wyndham returned they lived in sepa- ( rate houses and shared their lives only at week-ends. |, This is how Mrs. Wyndham explained the experiment: "Even when I was a little girl in Norway I was determined that I would never live in the same house as my husband. I had seen so much of the friction caused by constant propinquity. Richard has a studio in Kensington, and I have a little house in Chelsea. We visit each other, dine together, and sometimes go to the theatre, but our separate homes arei strictly our own—only to be visited by, invitation. Our reul married life i>; spent during the week-end." | Captain and Mrs. Wyndham wore' asked about it this week when they , attended an exhibition in London of Captain Wyndhamls pictures. ■•It has worked out perfectJ.y,"' they both declared.
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/AS19370514.2.52
Bibliographic details
Auckland Star, Volume LXVIII, Issue 113, 14 May 1937, Page 5
Word Count
217SEPARATE HOMES. Auckland Star, Volume LXVIII, Issue 113, 14 May 1937, Page 5
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