Part

  1 Int|         s request for a tale of love from him, ‘who am past the
  2 Int|  contempt for ‘old age pursuing love, but lacking strength.’
  3 Ded|       him strangely; nor has my love grown less, although he
  4 Ded|      this, that he let no man’s love for him go unrequited. And
  5 Ded|     heard aright, made work for love. It is the city of Venus.
  6 Ded|        truly felt the flames of love is but a stone, or a beast.
  7 Pre|         near forty, to write of love, or you, that are in your
  8 Pre|       are as fitted to tales of love as young men are to tales
  9 Pre|    uglier than old age pursuing love, but lacking strength. Certainly
 10 Pre|       sometimes find old men in love,—loved again, never; matrons
 11 Pre|       despise old age. No man’s love will hold a woman, but his
 12 Pre|      Indeed I know, to write of love does not beseem me, who
 13 Pre|         have been many times in love, nor yet lack fire, you
 14 Pre|      world, is more common than love? What state, what little
 15 Pre|       endured some villainy for love’s sake? I conjecture from
 16 Pre|     conjecture from myself whom love has sent into a thousand
 17 Pre|        I’ll tell of a wonderful love, almost incredible, with
 18 Pre|   themselves for the warfare of love, which is more bitter than
 19 Pre|    other sources how many evils love conceals, he may learn from
 20   1|      wealth was well fitted for love. He was thirty-two years
 21   1|       of the mind by men called love, excepting leisure. But
 22   1|       gifts of fortune on which love thrives. Euryalus was no
 23   1|         seen enough. Nor did he love alone. How strange love
 24   1|         love alone. How strange love is! Many handsome youths
 25   1|          that day, of Euryaluslove, nor he of hers: they both
 26   1|       adjoined) in time created love? But these had never seen
 27   1|      her husband, and cherishes love’s wound, keeping Euryalus’
 28   1|    matter, that I can no longer love my husband. His caresses
 29   1|       can produce one you could love. But, woe is me, what a
 30   1| betrayal or short memory of our love; and if first he’ll pledge
 31   1|       doors. I’ll make work for love; and either he’ll stay here
 32   2|         guessed that she was in love. For, riding about the town
 33   2|      not see the object of your love. That pleasure will be mine.’~ ~
 34   2|        in solitude, to give her love no outlet, as soon as she
 35   2|     into her confidence, for to love in silence only feeds the
 36   2|   Euryalus, and tell him that I love him. That is all I ask of
 37   2|        hope; put out that fire. Love is not hard to subdue, if
 38   2|         he would punish you. No love can be concealed for long.’~ ~ ‘
 39   2|         the flames of an unholy love, drive out this horrid evil
 40   2|        master of my thoughts is love, and that must follow which
 41   2|      and that must follow which love’s empire commands. Vainly,
 42   2|      you, Sosias. I’ll subdue a love that will not be hidden.
 43   2|     Euryalus, and make work for love. That will be my task, and
 44   2|   filled her burning heart with love, and brought hope to her
 45   2|        Euryalus rejoiced in her love, but awaited some convenient
 46   3|        NOW Euryalus, wounded by love’s unerring dart, could get
 47   3|        perceived that he was in love he marvelled for a long
 48   3|        What, Euryalus, you knew love’s empire: long pursuit,
 49   3|        strive uselessly against love? May I not do as Julius
 50   3|     often repeated: majesty and love are ill companions and cannot
 51   3|   Caesar? How often has he kept love busy? They say that Hercules,
 52   3|  death-dealing tusks. Roused by love, the tawny lions lash their
 53   3|       sea. Nothing is safe from love, and it’s denied to nothing:
 54   3|    nothing: even hatred dies at love’s command. Love rouses the
 55   3|         dies at love’s command. Love rouses the fierce flames
 56   3|   should I oppose nature’s law? Love conquers all: Let us give
 57   3|         all: Let us give way to love.’~ ~ Having come to this
 58   3|         life, depends on you. I love you more than myself, and
 59   3|       has made me captive. What love was, till now I knew not;
 60   3|         drink. Day and night, I love you, I want you, call on
 61   3|      drank every hour deeper of love, and resolved to write to
 62   3|       another concubine, for no love can reach me that is impure.
 63   3|       ardently to learn it, and love made him so persistent,
 64   3|     reason of his message was a love which desired of her nothing
 65   3|   reason the more worthy of his love: extravagant women, careless
 66   3|        about the bawd. That you love me does not surprise me,
 67   3|         should seem a pledge of love, I send in return a little
 68   3|        you make so little of my love. For, although many love
 69   3|        love. For, although many love you, none of their fires
 70   3|       demand that you return my love. Here is nothing that you
 71   3|   forbid you that. Say that you love me, and I am happy. As for
 72   3|      remind you sometimes of my love. But they were small, and
 73   3|        request, admit you to my love. For your noble character
 74   3|      merits that you should not love in vain. I will not say
 75   3|        happiness, that I should love you. I know myself; if I
 76   3|      know myself; if I begin to love, there will be no bounds
 77   3| persuades me not to return your love. Jason forsook Medea, who
 78   3|     Aeneas? Was not her foreign love the cause of her death?~ ~ ‘
 79   3|         to receive a stranger’s love, and will not expose myself
 80   3|         but death. Women do not love, they go mad; and there
 81   3|        terrible than a woman in love, whose love is not returned.
 82   3|     than a woman in love, whose love is not returned. When once
 83   3|         best that I should shun love, and more especially yours,
 84   3|         you, ask no more for my love, and gradually suppress
 85   3|        for a woman. And, if you love me, as you say you do, you
 86   3|     your fostering a stranger’s love, and you give examples of
 87   3|      that I can only admire and love your intelligence, not forget
 88   3|        you wanted to destroy my love, you should not have displayed
 89   3|        impossible for me not to love you, as for Phoebus to leave
 90   3|      why you will not return my love, that foreign loves have
 91   3|   consider other examples, such love as was between Antony and
 92   3|         that are adverse to our love and that befell only a few.
 93   3|     think like you, that I must love you for ever, and be for
 94   3|       If you treat me thus, who love you, how will you use one
 95   3|         Even kings and emperors love their servants, when they
 96   3|        Nor do the Gods scorn to love again those who love them.
 97   3|         to love again those who love them. Farewell, my hope,
 98   3| devotion, she too confessed the love she had dissembled, and
 99   3|      nor any longer deny you my love. You have conquered, and
100   3|        come now to receive your love and, if you fail me, you
101   3|    desert me, say so, before my love burns higher. Let us not
102   5|       she had told him of their love. So it was arranged with
103   5|        What limits are there to love? Love can be concealed as
104   5|       limits are there to love? Love can be concealed as little
105   6|       long the enjoyment of our love.’~ ~ ‘Take care, Euryalus,
106   6|   better avert one. Let my lady love; it will do no harm, provided
107   6|      out. But she is blind with love, and does not take sufficient
108   6|     your love-affair to me? You love Euryalus as much as ever,
109   6|         as ever, and, since you love him in secret, you should
110   6|        step in wisdom is not to love at all. But the second is,
111   6|       But the second is, if you love, to keep it quiet. You cannot
112   6|      chief anxiety is that this love of yours should not be discovered,
113   6|        you. You know how much I love; I cannot endure this passion
114   6|          Euryalus is faint with love, and I am dying of it. Nothing
115   6|         known each other, we’ll love less ardently, and our affection
116   7|        ever hinders you.~ ~ Oh, Love that subdues all things!
117   7|        animals. For this is how love’s flame alters the heart
118   8|        tried the mettle of your love; but you will find the same
119   8|         favour us, and give our love a fortunate issue. While
120   8|      purple and gold, ready for love’s business, when Sosias
121   8|       ever-lasting joy, but for love, whose happiness may be
122   8|     again would I be trapped by love. Oh, God, save me, spare
123   8|         Gods look kindly on our love, and would not fail two
124   9|        At last let us enjoy our love,’ and he matched his actions
125   9|        reputation, saying their love demanded no more than words
126   9|   either. This is the pledge of love, and I’ll die sooner than
127   9|        of her.~ ~ Nor did their love bring satiety, as when Tamar
128  10|         glorious and most noble love! Why do I not trust you?—
129  10|       cautious; you know how to love and how to protect your
130  11|       Emperor’s train, began to love Lucretia, and, being handsome,
131  11|     quite sure she returned his love and that only her woman’
132  11|      artifice, whereby the real love is disguised. Pacorus was
133  12|       to guard what many people love or strive for. And the lovers,
134  12|        are a good fellow, and I love you as you deserve, and
135  13|       afraid you have fallen in love with someone else, for husbands
136  13|        remarked:~ ~ ‘You cannot love me much, or you would have
137  13|     even that, the last bond of love, was not easily enjoyed.
138  13|     they could not forget their love any more than they could
139  14|          Now I do know you, and love and respect you for your
140  14|         man, how prone it is to love, whether for good or ill.
141  14|       or another, the pricks of love. You know that it is so,
142  14|         inflamed and drunk with love, to burn the more, the more
143  14|         their passion.~ ~ ‘Once love is in your bones, the most
144  14|        to your advantage.~ ~ ‘I love Lucretia. And it is not,
145  14|       your married ladies dont love men; they devour them. And
146  14|       kind eyes, I too began to love her. Indeed, I thought so
147  14|        did not deserve that her love should go unrequited.~ ~ ‘
148  14|         so iron, that would not love, when he is loved? But when
149  14|         to inflame her, that my love might not be barren, but
150  14|        each of us is equally in love. She is on fire, I burn;
151  14|    destiny? I did not choose to love: Fate compelled me.~ ~ ‘
152  14|    matter stands. Till now, our love is secret, but unless things
153  14|        be the charioteer of our love, and see to it that our
154  14|        once, for after that our love will soon diminish, and
155  14|      family, when you conceal a love that could not be made public
156  14|        Lucretia and myself, our love, our reputation, and the
157  14|       Why, she is so changed by love, you would not think her
158  14|        that nature has given to love so much power over men’s
159  16|        ll be killed. Oh unhappy love, more cruel than you are
160  16|        her die on mine!’~ ~ But love got the upper hand. Casting
161  17|      were they wearied by their love, but as Antaeus rose stronger
162  17|       more closely guarded. But love conquered all, and at last
163  18|     knew of this, for what does love not know? Who can deceive
164  18|    turned against you. Alas, my love, why did you not tell me
165  18|         of you!~ ~ ‘For now our love’s a secret and all men praise
166  18|   strong enough to maintain our love? I am the Emperor’s servant,
167  18|              Farewell! live and love me; and do not imagine that
168  19| misfortune; for to the fires of love was added a burning fever
169  19|       two are bound together by love and have become one spirit,
170  20|      heard the out-come of this love, a true story and an unhappy
171  20|      beware to drink the cup of love, that holds far more of
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