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1 Pre | such as Oriental historians love, reveals to us the fearless
2 Pre | had come back, and that love and madness had returned
3 Pre | very spirit of youth and love and joy, some have a nobler
4 Pre | highest law of morality, Love thy neighbour as thyself.
5 Pre | is in the Veda: You shall love your neighbour as yourselves
6 Pre | Beautiful and the True Beloved. Love, of which the divine being
7 Pre | in Creation, "singing of love unto itself in a wordless
8 Pre | ever playing the game of love with itself." Like the echo
9 Pre | Jami's doctrine of human love: "Avert not thy face from~[
10 Pre | serve to raise thee to the love of the True." It is almost
11 Pre | thus far in the things of love, and has learnt to see the
12 Pre | under the influence of true love, rising upward from these
13 Pre | vain-virtue and patriotism and the love of wife and child, power
14 Pre | should find the fire of love burning still, and with
15 Pre | sincerity in his praise of love and wine and boon-companionship,
16 Pre | more passionate image for love than: "Open my grave when
17 Pre | influence of Reason upon Love and found that it is like
18 Pre | up inextricably wine and love and Sufi teaching, and perhaps
19 Pre | eternity the perfume of love comes not to him who has
20 Pre | has lived with the life love breathed into it; but when
21 Pre | believe that it is an earthly love of whom he speaks when he
22 I | praise,~For it seemed that love was an easy thing,~But my
23 II | vex with bitter words his love's repose."~The tavern step
24 II | shall be thy hostelry,~For Love's diviner breath comes but
25 II | the world?~Ah, where is Love, thou Throne of Djem?" I
26 II | Not on the lips of men Love's secret lies,~Remote and
27 II(*) | of the poet's quest for love. In an allegory he shows
28 II(*) | finally, he concludes that love is not that which lies upon
29 III | is no halting-place~Upon Love's road-absent, I see thy
30 IV | life thy servant prays;~Love's dart in thy bent brows
31 IV | within thee dies,~Hiding love's agony from curious eyes,~
32 V | that Zuleika came forth,~Love parting the curtains of
33 V | and sugar lay.~But, fair Love, let good counsel direct
34 V(*) | wife, is one of the famous love stories of the East; Jami
35 V(*) | the first day) knew that love for him would bring Zuleikha (
36 V(*) | I knew for certain that Love would take us out of the
37 VI | enough of gain;~I have my Love, what more can I obtain?~
38 VII | garden of earth;~With a love like a huri I'ld take mine
39 IX | ring~I see the glow of my Love's red cheek,~And scant of
40 IX | of the cypress decked,~My Love shall come like a ruddy
41 IX | heart doth hold~The life love breathes-though my days
42 X | new and new!~Then with thy love to toy with thee,~Rest thee,
43 XII | warms not the enemy~When love is done--~Where is the extinguished
44 XIII | clean, and o'er my body pour~Love's generous wine! the worshippers
45 XIII | the proclamation of thy love~That shook the strings of
46 XVI | alone they have sought--~Love at least exists; yet if
47 XVI | at least exists; yet if Love were not,~Heart and soul
48 XVII | mistress yearns--in the mosque Love doth dwell~And the church,
49 XVIII(*)| Hafiz in his youth fell in love with a beautiful girl of
50 XX | that lies before her door,~Love's long desired elixir, pour~
51 XXII | doth lie,~Not worthy thy love to be cast by a drunken
52 XXIII | This city breathes her love in every part.~But to a
53 XXIV | The wine vessel! since my Love's cheek is hid,~A flood
54 XXIV | brow~Adorns my feast-until Love's secret slips~From her,
55 XXIV | very shame,~Dare not extol Love's light without eclipse.~
56 XXVI | secret draught of wine and love repressed~Are joys foundationless--
57 XXVI | rears,~There Ferhad for the love of Shirin pined,~Dyeing
58 XXVI | Travelling afar; what though Love's countenance~Be turned
59 XXVII | Drunk with desire, I seized Love's cup divine,~But she that
60 XXVII | overflow.~She knew not what Love's meanest slave can tell:~"'
61 XXVIII | my happy face~Clearly thy love was writ, which doth enhance~
62 XXVIII | of dawn brimmed high?~My love and I alone, God favouring
63 XXVIII | drunk with wine,~I found Love's passionate wisdom hidden
64 XXIX | And yet behind the veil Love's fire may burn--~Weep'st
65 XXIX | enemies have persecuted me,~My Love has turned and fled from
66 XXXIII | once it was; the seal~Upon Love's treasure casket, and the
67 XXXIV | of Chastity!~You brought Love's passionate red wine to
68 XXXIV | to bear~The burden of His love God laid on it,~He turned
69 XXXIV | that is not the flame of Love's true fire~Which makes
70 XXXIV(*)| bow down to him, for their love for God was greater than
71 XXXIV(*)| vessel into which divine love and wisdom are poured; and
72 XXXVI | would'st know the secret of Love's fire,~It shall be manifest
73 XXXVI | choir.~Ask me of faith and love that never dies;~Darius,
74 XXXVI | seek in vain~The key to Love's locked gateway; Heart
75 XXXVI(*)| Stanza 2.--"Love and Faith," says Rosenzweig,
76 XXXVII | Cypress-tree! green home of Love's sweet choir,~When I unto
77 XXXVIII | or let my mouth attain~My love's red mouth, or let my soul
78 XXXVIII | Others may find another love as fair;~Upon her threshold
79 XXXVIII | When from my body life and love have fled.~My soul is on
80 XL(*) | aside and declared their love to her. She replied that
81 XLII | XLII~TRUE love has vanished from every
82 XLII | Spring?~None now sayeth: "A love was mine,~Loyal and wise,
83 XLII | my care."~None remembers love's right divine;~What has
84 XLIII | free.~When the voice of thy love shall call me to be thy
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