One should always be in love. That is the reason one should never marry
Topic
The largest collection on the site spans romantic devotion, married life, philosophical eros, and the love that friendship and religious devotion produce. Kierkegaard returns often — for him love is not a feeling but a test of will. Russell notes clinically that it covers a variety of feelings, while Chesterton insists that love for the unlovable is the only kind that counts. Blake, Ovid, Dryden, and Aurelius treat it as duty and practice rather than fortune. The quotes here resist the sentimental: they deal with love as discipline, loss, appetite, and the strange asymmetry between what we feel and what we can offer. Whether you need language for a wedding speech, a letter, or simply want to understand an attachment that has defied explanation, the range spans four centuries of writers who thought about it seriously enough to write something worth keeping.
One should always be in love. That is the reason one should never marry
To get the full value of a joy you must have somebody to divide it with
'Tis better to have loved and lost than never to have loved at all.
Love is the life out of which are fashioned all the natural feelings, every emotion of man.
The good life is one inspired by love and guided by knowledge.
And love is something eternal, it changes its aspect but not its foundation.