Part, Dialogue
1 1, 1| the thing loved into the lover, so amongst the elements
2 1, 1| and the correlative of the lover. Jealousy, it is clear,
3 1, 1| must be the ardour of the lover about the thing loved, of
4 1, 1| the ruin and death of the lover, but~often kills Love itself,
5 1, 1| because, often in spite of the lover, it does not concede, and
6 1, 1| fate does not favour the lover; the spirit -- that is,
7 1, 2| seeing, that to no true lover can love be displeasing;
8 1, 3| but not to bind, and the lover, unless aided by the graces
9 1, 3| takes away the hope from the lover, that~by becoming or making
10 1, 3| other things of which the lover deems the loved one undeserving,
11 1, 3| subject to many pangs, every lover who is separated from the
12 1, 5| treated by it. In every lover I say there is this smith
13 1, 5| within him, so there is no lover that has not a god within
14 1, 5| a god within him, and no lover within whom this god is
15 2, 1| the humour of a furious lover, though the same may be
16 2, 1| virtuous, through which the lover is forced into those conditions
17 2, 2| And he to me: Oh, happy lover thou!~Delectable companion
18 2, 4| of the substance of the lover, so that being all melted
19 2, 4| me at once sightless, a lover, and a slave,~So that, blind
20 2, 5| are fair,~Will make thee lover more of sea than sky,~Oh
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