18 Passages From Some Of The Most Romantic Love Letters Of All Time
By Kelly Bishop
As a hopeless romantic who was born in the wrong century and knows I’ll never receive one of these, I’ve compiled some of the best quotes from love letters throughout history. Who knew Edgar Allan Poe was passionate about both murder and romance?
Henry VIII to Anne Boleyn (1528)
“Judge what an effect the presence of that person must have on me, whose absence has grieved my heart more than either words or writing can express and which nothing can cure.”
Thomas Otway to Elizabeth Barry (1678)
“Since the first day I saw you I have hardly enjoyed one day of perfect quiet.”
***
“I love you with that tenderness of spirit, that purity of truth, that sincerity of heart, that I could sacrifice the nearest friends or interests I have on earth barely to please you. If I had all the world, it should be yours; for with it I could but be miserable, were you not mine.”
***
“In short, you will quickly become to me the greatest blessing or the greatest curse that ever man was doomed to.”
Edgar Allan Poe to Mrs. Sarah Helene Whitman (1848)
“Oh, if I could but burn into your spirit the deep – the true meaning which I attach to those three syllables underlined! But, alas! The effort is all in vain and ‘I live and die unheard.’ …”
***
“And now, in the most simple words I can command, let me paint to you the impression made upon me by your personal presence. As you entered the room, pale, hesitating, and evidently oppressed at heart; as your eyes rested for one brief moment upon mine, I felt, for the first time in my life, and tremblingly acknowledged, the existence of spiritual influences altogether out of the reach of the reason.”
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“From that hour I have never been able to shake from my soul the belief that my Destiny, for good or for evil, either here or hereafter, is in some measure interwoven with your own.”
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“I would comfort you – soothe you – tranquillize you. You would rest from care – from all worldly perturbation. You would get better and finally well. And if not Helene – if you died – then, at least, I would clasp your dear hands in death, and willingly – oh, joyfully – joyfully go down with you into the night of the grave.”
***
“Say to me those coveted words that would turn Earth into Heaven.”
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“All thoughts – all passions seem now merged in that one consuming desire – the mere wish to make you comprehend – to make you see that for which there is no human voice – the unutterable fervor of my love for you.”
John Keats to Fanny Brawne (1819)
“My love has made me selfish. I cannot exist without you. I am forgetful of everything but seeing you again; my Life seems to stop there; I see no further. You have absorbed me. I have a sensation at the present moment as though I was dissolving: I should be exquisitely miserable without the hope of soon seeing you.”
***
“I have been astonished that men could die Martyrs for religion, — I have shuddered at it. I shudder no more; I could be martyred for my Religion, — love is my religion, — I could die for that. I could die for you.”
***
“My love is selfish. I cannot breathe without you.”
***
“I love you ever and ever and without reserve. The more I have known you the more have I loved. In every way, — even my jealousies have been agonies of Love; in the hottest fit I ever had I would have died for you.”
Victor Hugo to Adele Foucher (1821)
“Since the soul is superior to the body, to which it is united, it would remain on earth in painful loneliness were it not for the fact that among other human souls it may choose a companion – a partner in the trials of life and in the joys of the hereafter. When two souls, which have sought each other amid the crowd, find they have met, realize that they belong to each other, and comprehend this affinity, then it is that a union has been brought about, as pure and aspiring as themselves – a union which begun on earth will be consummated in heaven.”
***
“This union is love – genuine, complete love, such as few men can imagine. It is a love which is a religion, since the object of love is regarded as a divinity, with all the devotion and affection which turn the greatest sacrifices into the sublimest joys. Such a love you inspire in me, and such a love you will someday feel for me, although to my sorrow you do not feel it now. Your soul is incapable of an angelic love. It may be, therefore, that only an angel can inspire such a love.”
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(1822)
“Yes, I am your husband, your defender, protector, slave. On the day that I lose that conviction I shall have ceased to live, because my life will have lost its foundation. You are the only person to whom I can confide the desire, hope, and love that is within me – my soul itself.”
Marquis de Lafayette to his Wife, Madame de Lafayette (1777)
“I am in such haste that I know not what I write, but I do know that I love you more tenderly than ever, that the pain of this separation was necessary to convince me how very dear you are to me, and that I would give at this moment half my existence for the pleasure of embracing you again, and telling you with my own lips how well I love you.”