Part, Dialogue
1 1, 1| Love's object, and cold Jealousy,~Delight me, and torment,
2 1, 1| Love, Fate, the Object, and Jealousy. Here love is not a low,
3 1, 1| correlative of the lover. Jealousy, it is clear, must be the
4 1, 1| banishes every other thought. Jealousy torments, because although
5 1, 1| little, love less, and of jealousy know nothing), yet, notwithstanding
6 1, 1| association, and signification, jealousy comes to trouble and poisons
7 1, 1| good.~Minister of torment! Jealousy!~Fetid harpy! Tisiphone
8 1, 1| the above is added, that Jealousy not only is sometimes the
9 1, 1| death itself," he says of Jealousy, because as Love has no
10 1, 1| it from me," he says of Jealousy, not simply in order that
11 1, 1| with the heavy burden of jealousy which torments it. To this
12 1, 1| some other, spiteful Fate!~Jealousy, get thee hence -- begone!
13 1, 1| hence out of the world, thou Jealousy, because one of those~two
14 1, 1| than. my love; and thou, Jealousy, art not external to the
15 1, 5| love without fear, ardour, jealousy, rancour, and other passions,
16 2, 1| beloved, belongs the tooth of jealousy and suspicion. Thus, too,
17 2, 1| with suspicion, fear, and jealousy to the great hurt and ruin
18 2, 4| bitten by the serpent of jealousy, became affected in the
19 2, 4| any guide, unless he has jealousy for his escort. He begs
20 2, 4| spiteful, rabid, rancorous jealousy~Makes me go stumbling along
21 2, 4| the question of Love and Jealousy, the which is like a moth,
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