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| A cold lover is a faithless friend. Italian. | 1 |
| A lovers anger is short lived. Italian. | 2 |
| A lovers soul lives in the soul of his mistress. Plutarch. | 3 |
| A reserved lover makes a suspicious husband. Goldsmith. | 4 |
| All are fools or lovers first or last. Dryden. | 5 |
| All mankind love a lover. Emerson. | 6 |
An incensed lover shuts his eyes, And tells himself many lies. Publius Syrus. | 7 |
| As is the lover so is the beloved. Italian. | 8 |
| Bagdad is not remote for a lover. Turkish. | 9 |
| Every lover is a soldier. Ovid. | 10 |
| For the lover travel and patience. Turkish. | 11 |
In her first passion woman loves her lover, In all others, all she loves is love. Byron. | 12 |
| Love but laughs at lovers perjury. Dryden. | 13 |
| Let him not be a lover who has no courage. Italian. | 14 |
| Lover and king brook no companion. Turkish. | 15 |
| Lovers are fools. Latin. | 16 |
| Lovers break not hours unless to come before their time. Shakespeare. | 17 |
| Lovers ever run before the clock. | 18 |
| Lovers live by love as larks by leeks. | 19 |
| Lovers purses are tied with cobwebs. Italian. | 20 |
| Lovers quarrels are love redoubled. Portuguese. | 21 |
| Lovers remember everything. Ovid. | 22 |
| Lovers think others blind. Italian, Spanish. | 23 |
| Old lover, young fool. German. | 24 |
| Quarrels of lovers but renew their love. | 25 |
| Sapient, Solitary, Solicitous and Secret are the four Ss that all true lovers should possess. Don Quixote. | 26 |
| The conversation of lovers is inexhaustible. Benjamin Disraeli. | 27 |
| The lover in the husband may be lost. Lyttleton. | 28 |
| The oaths of one that loves a woman are not to be believed. Spanish. | 29 |
The prostrate lover when he lowest lies, But stoops to conquer, but kneels to rise. | 30 |
| The reason why lovers are never weary of one another is this, they are always talking of themselves. Rochefoucauld. | 31 |
| The sight of lovers feeds those in love. Shakespeare. | 32 |
| The soul of a lover lives in the body of another. Cato. | 33 |
| There is more pleasure in loving than in being loved. | 34 |
| What law can bind lovers? Love is their supreme law. Boethius. | 35 |
| What woman says to her fond lover, should be written on air or the swift water. Catullus. | 36 |
| Who can deceive a lover? Virgil. | 37 |
| Whom I love I beat. Russian. | 38 |
| You must make a lover angry, if you wish him to love. Publius Syrus. | 39 |
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