Part, Dialogue
1 1, Int| distinguished by their love for and study of philosophy;
2 1, Int| than these -- to wit, the love of humanity and the love
3 1, Int| love of humanity and the love of wisdom; and Mocenigo,
4 1, Int| one great intent -- the love of the Divine, which is
5 1, Int| of comfort in the larger love of humanity; his work was
6 1, Int| to inspire them with the love of the highest good and
7 1, 1 | of the myrtle who sing of love: if they bear themselves
8 1, 1 | heart proceed two opposites, love and hate; and the mountain
9 1, 1 | consumes him.~CIC. Why is love symbolized by fire?~TANS.
10 1, 1 | one suffice thee: that as love converts the thing loved
11 1, 1 | the modes are infinite.~4.~Love, Fate, Love's object, and
12 1, 1 | infinite.~4.~Love, Fate, Love's object, and cold Jealousy,~
13 1, 1 | give to me the fruit of love in peace?~And that which
14 1, 1 | brings forward four things: Love, Fate, the Object, and Jealousy.
15 1, 1 | Object, and Jealousy. Here love is not a low, ignoble, and
16 1, 1 | speak to him who knows what~love is, and which it is vain
17 1, 1 | try to explain to others. Love delights, because to him
18 1, 1 | loves it is a pleasure to love; and he who really loves
19 1, 1 | From fairest dart that love did choose,~Lofty, most
20 1, 1 | although she~is the daughter of Love, and is derived from him,
21 1, 1 | necessary consequence wherever love is found (as may be observed
22 1, 1 | development, learn little, love less, and of jealousy know
23 1, 1 | beautiful and of good in Love. Therefore I said in another
24 1, 1 | wicked child of Envy and of Love!~That turnest into pain
25 1, 1 | be denied,~The reign of Love would so much fairer be,~
26 1, 1 | the lover, but~often kills Love itself, because Love comes
27 1, 1 | kills Love itself, because Love comes to be so much under
28 1, 1 | ideas which follow. Why is Love called the "insensate boy"?~
29 1, 1 | TANS. I will tell you. Love is called the insensate
30 1, 1 | speculative one is, the more Love raises the genius and purifies
31 1, 1 | It is commonly said that love makes fools of the old and
32 1, 1 | mature age, into whose hands Love puts the alphabet.~CIC.
33 1, 1 | of Jealousy, because as Love has no more close companion
34 1, 1 | will I. He says next of Love: he shows me Paradise, in
35 1, 1 | in order to prove that Love himself is not blind, and
36 1, 1 | sunshine. As for himself, Love brightens, clears, and opens
37 1, 1 | demonstrates in another sonnet:~7.~Love, through whom high truth
38 1, 1 | blind.~paragraph continues] Love shows Paradise in order
39 1, 1 | appearance. He says, Fate takes love away; because, often in
40 1, 1 | indicated by the finger of Love seems to him the only thing,
41 1, 1 | joy by the great force of love, whatever may be the result;
42 1, 1 | me from that which I so love, and which opens to me the
43 1, 1 | all the grace~Of changeful Love, and of that noble face.~
44 1, 1 | burden he!~But what say I of Love?~If he and she one subject
45 1, 1 | art none other than. my love; and thou, Jealousy, art
46 1, 1 | exclaiming But what do I say of Love? If this presence, this
47 1, 1 | other than the empire of Love, the rule of Love and its
48 1, 1 | empire of Love, the rule of Love and its own rule; the impression
49 1, 1 | rule; the impression of Love which appears in the substance
50 1, 1 | face," replies "Inconstant Love." 1~
51 1, 2 | and he says thus:~9.~Of Love the standard-bearer I;~My
52 1, 2 | Vulcan in my heart.~Others I love; myself I hate.~If I be
53 1, 2 | Hence it appears that heroic love is a torment, because it
54 1, 2 | present, as does animal love, but is of the future and
55 1, 2 | death, dead life I live?~Love has me dead, alack! and
56 1, 2 | death.~F. Who's to blame~S. Love.~F. That rascal?~S. That
57 1, 2 | says that he craves for love, and he complains of it,
58 1, 2 | that to no true lover can love be displeasing; but because
59 1, 2 | he says:~Never let me of Love complain,~For Love alone
60 1, 2 | me of Love complain,~For Love alone can ease my pain.~
61 1, 2 | Herein he proves that his love is truly heroic; because
62 1, 2 | beauty of the body, that love that has in it the divine,
63 1, 2 | are there three species of love, of which one raises itself
64 1, 2 | entangled in the meshes of love, some aim at enjoying, and
65 1, 2 | supply the wings than heroic love; others put before themselves
66 1, 2 | of these, although they love the body and greatly desire
67 1, 2 | nourish, and preserve a love like that; but one should
68 1, 3 | fervour, excited by the love of the divine, of justice,
69 1, 3 | neglect of one's self, but love and desire of the beautiful
70 1, 3 | he fears nothing, and for love of the divine he despises
71 1, 3 | that~ ./. sometimes, having love for his trusty escort, who
72 1, 3 | furious, he squanders away the love of that which he cannot
73 1, 3 | the principal lesson that Love gives to him is, that he
74 1, 3 | the fount, the bosom of my love~Behold the flames, the arrows,
75 1, 3 | soul?~Here he shows his love not to be like that of the
76 1, 3 | passion, which forces him to love that fire more than any
77 1, 3 | causes the attraction of love to the body is a certain
78 1, 3 | and unworthiness of such a love,~it yet has not power to
79 1, 3 | within,~And makes it seem a love supreme and good.~Wearied,
80 1, 3 | since, through conformity, love is excited, enkindled, and
81 1, 3 | courtesies received, or a love of quite vile persons, of
82 1, 3 | be wise and just; but we love them not because they are
83 1, 3 | unjust and ignorant; many we love because they are beautiful,
84 1, 3 | me,~Yet do I thank thee, love, and owe thee much,~That
85 1, 3 | has severed me.~Here his love is entirely heroic and divine,
86 1, 3 | loves, since he feels his love is engaged most worthily
87 1, 3 | obligation he is under to love, nor cease from rendering
88 1, 3 | himself, he comes to lose the love and affection for every
89 1, 3 | a crow;~And I by help of love,~From an inferior thing,
90 1, 4 | the discourse of heroic love, in all which tends to its
91 1, 4 | than comprehensible, and love it is that moves and urges
92 1, 4 | As I understand: because love transforms and converts
93 1, 4 | insane and blind, that is Love, who, by the mercy and favour
94 1, 4 | me,~I suffer with a cruel love.~By others it is called
95 1, 4 | form, and the will to a love commensurate with such comprehension;
96 1, 4 | wood nymph;~Arm ye with love,~Warn with the flame of
97 1, 4 | are to arm themselves with love, with that love that is
98 1, 4 | themselves with love, with that love that is fired by the domestic
99 1, 4 | TANS. I will tell thee. All love proceeds from seeing: intelligent
100 1, 4 | from seeing: intelligent love, from seeing intelligently;
101 1, 4 | intelligently; sensuous love, from seeing sensuously.
102 1, 4 | things divine we have more love, than knowledge?~TANS. We
103 1, 4 | beautiful; then immediately love is born. Now this is the
104 1, 4 | the affection to a greater love than the love of that which
105 1, 4 | a greater love than the love of that which is~seen; for,
106 1, 4 | that the soul would ever love that which it loves, and
107 1, 4 | able to reach, he would love death, which would open
108 1, 4 | account of the ordinary love of the material and of things
109 1, 4 | moved by its own proper love of good, and being urged
110 1, 4 | disunited and disjoined: that is Love; he who has joined together
111 1, 4 | inferior, the affection of Love proceeds, as the intellect
112 1, 5 | of which the architect is Love, the material is the amorous
113 1, 5 | By pity's hand alone, oh Love,~By showing all my woe,
114 1, 5 | this he comes to declare to Love that the means by which
115 1, 5 | me to make complaint of love,~Love, without whom I will
116 1, 5 | make complaint of love,~Love, without whom I will not
117 1, 5 | their proud foes;~So does my love -- that equals love of heaven -- ~
118 1, 5 | does my love -- that equals love of heaven -- ~Become a living
119 1, 5 | soul had killed with scorn,~Love brings again stronger than
120 1, 5 | brings again stronger than love himself~Thy presence is
121 1, 5 | evoke true nor constant love. That beauty, which is seen
122 1, 5 | proves, that every sort of love, the greater its dominion
123 1, 5 | not:~I through the fire of love, unhappy die;~But thee the
124 1, 5 | other, by the presence of love, transmutes life into death.
125 1, 5 | difference between sensual love, which has no stability
126 1, 5 | object, and intellectual love, which aims only at one,
127 1, 5 | perfect in divine heroic love, who feels the spur, the,
128 1, 5 | remorse or trouble about other love; but him who has no feeling
129 1, 5 | and troubles which beset love, principally love of a low
130 1, 5 | beset love, principally love of a low kind, which is
131 1, 5 | offending souls.~For ill-ordered love has in itself the beginning
132 1, 5 | believe that none other than Love could declare it, he being
133 1, 5 | is false, so there is no love without fear, ardour, jealousy,
134 1, 5 | Plato, where it says that Love has inherited from his mother,
135 1, 5 | Plato in the bare feet. Love becomes subjected and flies
136 1, 5 | In conclusion, whatever love it may be, it is ever afflicted
137 1, 5 | goddess of intelligence or of love.~CIC. Truly, as are the
138 1, 5 | that glorious light. For love, while it is finite, contented,
139 1, 5 | TANS. Persistence in such a love and ardent desire of true
140 1, 5 | because all those fruits of love that we can gather in this
141 1, 5 | seems to me to mean that love never leaves him, and at
142 1, 5 | understand -- that is, that love as an instant, or persisting,
143 1, 5 | the meaning of the phrase "love endures as an instant?"~
144 1, 5 | to say that the whole of love is no less present than
145 1, 5 | he meant to say that his love was but for an~instant --
146 1, 5 | which is an atom or point, love persists or endures; therefore
147 1, 5 | months, the days, the hours,~Love waits on me, strikes, binds,
148 2, 1 | to secure the fruits of love, such as the special grace
149 2, 1 | looking at the sun that I so love.~You ask in pity, wherefore
150 2, 1 | dost thou know that the love of corporeal beauty to those
151 2, 1 | when the necessity for love is converted~into a study
152 2, 1 | thus proportionally in the love of the supernal Eros, as
153 2, 1 | which are these: "If the love of glory is dear to thy
154 2, 1 | he will not feel~either love or hatred of things mortal.
155 2, 1 | altrui rigor mi lassa)~Love doth exalt and reverence
156 2, 1 | 47.~Writ by the hand of Love may each behold~Upon my
157 2, 1 | thine own beauty, by this love of mine~(So great that e'
158 2, 1 | Ill-timed reward for such a love as this.~Let not such rigour
159 2, 1 | whoever beholds it, and by his love, which, perchance, is equal
160 2, 1 | appear greater than that love by means of which it communicates
161 2, 1 | am I.~That I may gain my love, I lose myself.~Through
162 2, 1 | it rejected the blows of love which assailed it on innumerable
163 2, 1 | the intelligence. At last, Love, who in various ways and
164 2, 1 | all my strength 'gainst Love Divine~When he assailed
165 2, 1 | that one should turn to love any other thing when once
166 2, 1 | that he can do other than love it, as it is impossible
167 2, 1 | treachery,~But the assaults of Love come stealing secretly.~
168 2, 1 | deceivers and traitors. But Love, who is stronger and greater
169 2, 1 | fine, it seems to me that Love is all and does all, of
170 2, 1 | him.~MAR. You say well. Love then, as he who works~ ./.
171 2, 1 | what the ancients say, that Love precedes all the other gods,
172 2, 1 | must we find out, whether Love appears and makes himself
173 2, 1 | super-essential unity, and.. all love, all one, it feels itself
174 2, 1 | affection. Then there is no love or desire of any particular
175 2, 1 | conclusion where be says to Love, "Turn otherwhere thy bow,"
176 2, 1 | I too, lured, enticed by Love, must feel,~The rigour keen
177 2, 1 | In what manner and why Love is a traitor and deceiver
178 2, 2 | which means that Divine love does not weigh down, nor
179 2, 2 | She who my mind to other love did move,~To whom all others
180 2, 2 | bells.~Then said I unto Love: See, I am hers.~And he
181 2, 2 | destiny,~Within the Court of Love.~So happy thou in thy captivity~
182 2, 2 | any other, is praised by Love, who considers him so fortunate,
183 2, 2 | raised towards the highest love, and that it learns to consider "
184 2, 2 | roused his mind to high love, he takes occasion to magnify
185 2, 2 | their mind roused to highest love. Let us now come to the
186 2, 3 | ignited by the fire of love,~Swifter than wind, dost
187 2, 3 | Exalted by this most unhappy love,~If of thy pain and mine
188 2, 3 | will an infinite torment of love, where there is no pain
189 2, 3 | it is inflamed by Divine love, and finally converted into
190 2, 3 | can inspire~others with love; as the splendour of the
191 2, 3 | has been said that Divine love weeps with indescribable,
192 2, 3 | would understand that Divine love which is. deity itself;
193 2, 3 | easily understands Divine love, so far as it is to be found
194 2, 4 | MIN. Many have fallen in love through report alone.~SEV.
195 2, 4 | caused by the dart which love has caused to penetrate
196 2, 4 | affection, as in the question of Love and Jealousy, the which
197 2, 4 | to take place with heroic love.~SEV. True, according to
198 2, 4 | seen in the lower kind of love; but I mean according to
199 2, 4 | which happens to those who love truth and goodness. which
200 2, 4 | intellect. There are those who love before they understand:
201 2, 4 | brought about also by a great love which He fears to offend
202 2, 5 | receiving the reward of their love, and fearing that such despair
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