Part, Dialogue
1 1, 1| love converts the thing loved into the lover, so amongst
2 1, 1| The object is the thing loved and the correlative of the
3 1, 1| the lover about the thing loved, of which it boots not to
4 1, 1| itself worthy of the thing loved; others, and they are the
5 1, 1| or it makes the things loved, grand-at least in appearance.
6 1, 2| vex or irritate the thing loved. He says, then, that hope
7 1, 2| through which the thing loved might be perturbed and saddened.~
8 1, 2| is not worthy of being loved otherwise than to make the
9 1, 3| corporeal beauty. But how? I loved against my will; for, were
10 1, 3| which the lover deems the loved one undeserving, the first
11 1, 3| undeserving, the first is, being loved; and yet, although he cannot
12 1, 3| separated from the thing loved (to which being joined by
13 1, 4| converts into the thing loved.~TANS. Well dost thou know
14 1, 5| albeit, fixed in the thing loved, yet now and then she becomes
15 2, 1| beseem~If that, of Heaven so loved and eulogized,~Should hold
16 2, 1| he is worthy of the thing loved and perchance of even a
17 2, 4| fearful about the thing loved.~SEV. And so he comes to
18 2, 4| God is more honoured and loved by silence than by words;
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