Love me, and leave me not.

May God above Increase our love.

May you live long.

Mizpah [i.e. watch-tower].

Mutual forbearance.

My heart and I, Until I die.

My wille were. (Gold signet-ring, with a cradle as device.)

Never newe. (Alianour, wife of the duke of Somerset.)

No gift can show The love I owe.

Not two, but one, Till life is gone.

Post spinas palma.

Pray to love, and love to pray.

Quod Deus coniunsit homo non separet. (Sixteenth century; G. H. Gower, Esq.)

Silence ends strife With man and wife.

Tecta lege, lecta tege. (Ring of Matthew Paris; found at Hereford.)

Till death us depart. (Margaret, wife of the earl of Shrewsbury.)

Till my life’s ende. (Elizabeth, wife of lord Latymer.)

To enjoy is to obey.

Tout pur vous. (Fifteenth century, with St. Christopher.)

Treu und fest.

True love Will ne’er remove.

Truth trieth troth.

We join our love In God above.

Wedlock, ’tis said, In heaven is made.

Whear this i giue, i wish to liue.

When this you see, Remember me.

Where hearts agree, Three God will be.

Yours in heart.

Ring and the Book (The), a dramatic monologue (1868-69), by Robert Browning, founded on a cause célèbre of Italian history.


  By PanEris using Melati.

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