“He loved his country and his country loved him. He lived for her honour, and she will cherish his memory.” Henry Temple, 3rd Viscount Palmerston (1784–1865) British politician The Marquis of Lorne, Viscount Palmerston, K.G. (London: 1892), p. 235
“The instant he knew he loved her, she slipped down his body and out of his arms.” Don DeLillo book Cosmopolis Source: Cosmopolis
“His love for her was a gift he gave her daily, expecting nothing in return. He walked at her side, his love for her a torch to guide her footsteps along the dark path she walked.” Margaret Weis book Dragons of a Fallen Sun Source: Dragons of a Fallen Sun
“The moon's an arrant thief, And her pale fire she snatches from the sun.” William Shakespeare Timon of Athens Source: Timon of Athens
“For the first time, he looked at her, and she wasn’t a stranger, she was Clary—his friend. His family. The girl he’d sworn always to protect. The girl he loved as fiercely as he loved himself.” Cassandra Clare (1973) American author Source: The Lost Herondale
“When he loved his bride it was not a queen he loved, but rather the girl as she might have been if she had not been destroyed in her childhood.” Orson Scott Card Hart's Hope Hart's Hope (1983)
“And he made love to her, offering his body in both tenderness and anger, unsure which was the best way to pass her bits of his soul so that she could patch her own with it” Jodi Picoult book The Pact Source: The Pact
“He treasured her, treasured her tears, treasured her love for others. Her heart might even be big enough to fill that empty space in his own chest. Perhaps she could be his heart as well.” Elizabeth Hoyt (1970) American writer Source: Scandalous Desires
“And all the time she felt the reflection of his hopelessness in her. She couldn't quite, quite love in hoplessness. And he, being hopeless, couldn't ever love at all.” D.H. Lawrence book Women in Love Source: Women in Love
“Sometimes she felt sweet smells with her nose; it was sweeter, she thought, than ever was any sweet earthly thing that she smelled before…Sometimes she heard with her bodily ears such sounds and melodies that she might not well hear what a man said to her in that time unless he spoke the louder. These sounds and melodies had she heard nearly every day for the term of twenty-five years…She saw with her bodily eye many white things flying all about her on every side, as thick in a manner as motes in the sun; they were right delicate and comfortable, and the brighter that the sun shone …Also our Lord gave her another token, which endured about sixteen years, and it increased ever more and more, and that was a flame of fire wonderfully hot and delectable and right comfortable, not wasting but ever increasing of flame, for, though the weather was never so cold, she felt the heat burning in her breast and at her heart, and verily as a man should feel the material fire if he put his hand or his finger therein” Margery Kempe (1373) English saint (Staley, 2001: 64-5). The Book of Margery Kempe