Maybe you should have one!![]()
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Just teasing, vehve; I've never been one to meddle in others' affairs.![]()
Seriously, sounds and looks like the wedding truly was a joyous occasion. The bride looks radiant (and pregnant; looks like the cat would have been out of the bag whether she wanted it to be or not), hey, even the horse looks happy, even if it did take some persuasion to get it there.![]()
The big bouquet trick worked in the front on photos, though. I knew someone who married when his new wife was about 20' from the delivery room - she had a bouquet that looked like the wreath they put on the Kentucky Derby winner.

Up until WWII there was a branch of the Dutch Reformed Church that required brides to be pregnant to marry; if the baby came before the ceremony, it was just carried in the hood of Mommy's wedding cloak. Apparently the Germans exterminated them during the war.
In some rural parts of Scandinavia, even in the 19th Century many brides were often pregnant or already had given birth. Farmers have to make sure the heifer is fertile.
Apologies if I've offended anyone - but some traditional rural European cultures felt proving the bride fertile was far more significant than virginity. So the modern horror over the pregnant bride would have seemed strange to them. In most of Europe the closest thing to a "marriage" among most of the peasantry consisted of a blessing by the priest. More formal arrangements were restricted to those who had enough property to be concerned about inheritance.