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Examples

  • And thou would'st fain prove thy love True-love, says thou?

    The Geste of Duke Jocelyn Jeffery Farnol 1915

  • For True-love, though blind, they say, hath eyes to see all that is good and sweet and true.

    The Geste of Duke Jocelyn Jeffery Farnol 1915

  • So we bid thee sing us of Love -- True-love, what it is.

    The Geste of Duke Jocelyn Jeffery Farnol 1915

  • Shame shall fly thee since True-love out-faceth Shame!

    The Geste of Duke Jocelyn Jeffery Farnol 1915

  • Here be very many noble knights wondrous learned in the smiting of buffets, but little else; here be noble dames very apt at the play of eyes, the twining of fingers, the languishment of sighs, that, seeking True-love, find but its shadow; and here also grey beards that have forgot the very name of Love.

    The Geste of Duke Jocelyn Jeffery Farnol 1915

  • All things vanish and pass utterly away save only True-love, and that abideth everlastingly; 'tis sweeter than Life, and stronger than

    The Broad Highway Jeffery Farnol 1915

  • HE: Because thy fears, being unjust, hurt me, for ah, Yolande, my love for thee is deep and true, and True-love is ever gentle and very humble.

    The Geste of Duke Jocelyn Jeffery Farnol 1915

  • "Miscall not love, Lobkyn, for sure True-love is every man's birthright."

    The Geste of Duke Jocelyn Jeffery Farnol 1915

  • True-love amid the apple-blossoms, lovers who outwake the nightingales of April, the touch of hands and lips, and the clinging of flower-soft limbs together; and all this amid the gay, musical, perfumed landscape of the Spring.

    More Trivia Logan Pearsall Smith 1907

  • The Gypsie finding he was not displeased in his Heart, told him, after a farther Enquiry into his Hand, that his True-love was constant, and that she should dream of him to-night: My old Friend cried Pish, and bid her go on.

    The Spectator, Volume 1 Eighteenth-Century Periodical Essays Joseph Addison 1695

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