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#6764 | | That is the true season of love, when we believe that we alone can love, that no one could have loved so before us, and that no one will love in the same way as us. -- Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
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#6765 | | That's life for you, said McDunn. Someone always waiting for someone who never comes home. Always someone loving something more than that thing loves them. And after awhile you want to destroy whatever that thing is, so it can't hurt you no more. -- R. Bradbury, "The Fog Horn"
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#6766 | | The birds are singing, the flowers are budding, and it is time for Miss Manners to tell young lovers to stop necking in public. It's not that Miss Manners is immune to romance. Miss Manners has been known to squeeze a gentleman's arm while being helped over a curb, and, in her wild youth, even to press a dainty slipper against a foot or two under the dinner table. Miss Manners also believes that the sight of people strolling hand in hand or arm in arm or arm in hand dresses up a city considerably more than the more familiar sight of people shaking umbrellas at one another. What Miss Manners objects to is the kind of activity that frightens the horses on the street...
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#6767 | | The giraffe you thought you offended last week is willing to be nuzzled today.
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#6768 | | The heart has its reasons which reason knows nothing of. -- Blaise Pascal
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#6769 | | The heart is wiser than the intellect.
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#6770 | | The little pieces of my life I give to you, with love, to make a quilt to keep away the cold.
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#6771 | | The magic of our first love is our ignorance that it can ever end. -- Benjamin Disraeli
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#6772 | | The myth of romantic love holds that once you've fallen in love with the perfect partner, you're home free. Unfortunately, falling out of love seems to be just as involuntary as falling into it.
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#6773 | | The only difference in the game of love over the last few thousand years is that they've changed trumps from clubs to diamonds. -- The Indianapolis Star
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