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1、史上最偉大的十封英文情書情書的的偉大不在辭藻華美,而在情真意切。下面輯錄的十篇情書,是英國網(wǎng)民投票選出的十大經(jīng)典之作Johnny Cash wishes wife June Carter Cash a happy 65th birthday (1994)Happy Birthday Princess,We get old and get use to each other. We think alike. We read each others minds. We know what the other wants without asking. Sometimes we irritate e

2、ach other a little bit. Maybe sometimes take each other for granted.But once in awhile, like today, I meditate on it and realise how lucky I am to share my life with the greatest woman I ever met. You still fascinate and inspire me. You influence me for the better. Youre the object of my desire, the

3、 #1 Earthly reason for my existence. I love you very much.Winston Churchill tells wife Clementine Churchill of his undying love (1935)My darling Clemmie, you wrote some words very dear to me, about my having enriched your life. I cannot tell you what pleasure this gave me, because I always feel so o

4、verwhelmingly in your debt, if there can be accounts in love. What it has been to me to live all these years in your heart and companionship no phrases can convey.Time passes swiftly, but is it not joyous to see how great and growing is the treasure we have gathered together, amid the storms and str

5、esses of so many eventful and, to millions, tragic and terrible years?With tender love from your devoted,W.Winston Churchill first met Clementine Hozier in 1904, but it wasnt until their second meeting in April of 1908 that their romance began. After a four-month courtship, Winston proposed to Cleme

6、ntine on August 11, 1908. They were married one month later at Saint Margarets Church, Westminster, in London onSeptember 12, 1908.Their marriage was a lasting and happy one but they also had fiery arguments. Clementine was a determined, dignified, loyal, sympathetic and yet also challenging partner

7、. She was the critic Winston heeded above all others. During their fifty-six year marriage, Winston and Clementine wrote warmly to one another whenever they were apart. They even wrote love notes back and forth to each other while living in the same house. Their letters and notes often ended with dr

8、awings illustrating their pet names for each other. He was her pug (a breed of dog) and she was his cat.John Keats tells next door neighbour Fanny Brawne he cannot live without her (1819)Recipient:Fanny Brawne (1800-1865) was first Keatss neighbor and later his fiance. The eldest child of a widowed

9、mother, she at first perplexed and exasperated the poet. They fell in love, though Keatss friends were against the match.Summary:Keatss letters to Fanny Brawne are among the most famous love letters ever written. As next door neighbors, they exchanged numerous short notes, and occasionally more pass

10、ionate ones. None of Fannys letters to Keats survive. From his, however, it seems he was often unsettled by her behavior and uncertain of her affection. His illness brought them closer; when he left for Rome, they were engaged and deeply in love.My dearest Girl,This moment I have set myself to copy

11、some verses out fair. I cannot proceed with any degree of content. I must write you a line or two and see if that will assist in dismissing you from my Mind for ever so short a time. Upon my Soul I can think of nothing else The time is passed when I had power to advise and warn you against the unpro

12、mising morning of my Life My love has made me selfish. I cannot exist without you I am forgetful of every thing but seeing you again my Life seems to stop there I see no further. You have absorbd me. I have a sensation at the present moment as though I was dissolving I should be exquisitely miserabl

13、e without the hope of soon seeing you. I should be afraid to separate myself far from you. My sweet Fanny, will your heart never change? My love, will it? I have no limit now to my love You note came in just here I cannot be happier away from you T is richer than an Argosy of Pearles. Do not threat

14、me even in jest. I have been astonished that Men could die Martyrs for religion I have shudderd at it I shudder no more I could be martyrd for my Religion Love is my religion I could die for that I could die for you. My Creed is Love and you are its only tenet You have ravishd me away by a Power I c

15、annot resist: and yet I could resist till I saw you; and even since I have seen you I have endeavoured often “to reason against the reasons of my Love.” I can do that no more the pain would be too great My Love is selfish I cannot breathe without you.Yours for everJohn KeatsErnest Hemingway professe

16、s his love to Marlene Dietrich (1951)Hemingway to Dietrich, Sept 26, 1951: I cant say how every time I ever put my arms around you I felt that I was home. Nor too many things. But we were always cheerful and jokers together.Napoleon Bonaparte sends his love to Josephine de Beauharnais (1796)Marmirol

17、o, July 17, 1796I have your letter, my adorable love. It has filled my heart with joy. since I left you I have been sad all the time. My only happiness is near you. I go over endlessly in my thought of your kisses, your tears, your delicious jealousy. The charm of my wonderful Josephine kindles a li

18、ving, blazing fire in-my heart and senses. When shall I be able to pass every minute near you, with nothing to do but to love you and nothing to think of but the pleasure of telling you of it and giving you proof of it? I loved you some time ago; since then I feel that I love you a thousand times be

19、tter. Ever since I have known you I adore you more every day. That proves how wrong is that saying of La Bruyere Love comes all of a sudden. Ah, let me see some of your faults; be less beautiful, less graceful, less tender, less good. But never be jealous and never shed tears. Your tears send me out

20、 of my mind . they set my very blood on fire. Believe me that it is utterly impossible for me to have a single thought that is not yours, a single fancy that is not submissive to your will. Rest well. Restore your health. Come back to me and then at any rate before we die we ought to be able to say:

21、 We were happy for so very many days! Millions of kisses even to your dog. BONAPARTERichard Burton tells Elizabeth Taylor of her beauty (1964)I lust after your smell and your round belly and the exquisite softness of the inside of your thighs and your baby-bottom and your giving lips & the half-host

22、ile look in your eyes when youre deep in rut with your little Welsh stallion, he wrote. My blind eyes are desperately waiting for the sight of you. You dont realise of course, how fascinatingly beautiful you have always been, and how strangely you have acquired an added and special and dangerous lov

23、eliness.King Henry VIII expresses his love for Anne Boleyn (1527)“I beg to know expressly your intention touching the love between us. Necessity compels me to obtain this answer, having been more than a year wounded by the dart of love, and not yet sure whether I shall fail or find a place in your a

24、ffection.”Beethoven pens his love for his Immortal Beloved whose true identity remains a mystery (1812)July 6, in the morningMy angel, my all, my very self - Only a few words today and at that with pencil (with yours) - Not till tomorrow will my lodgings be definitely determined upon - what a useles

25、s waste of time - Why this deep sorrow when necessity speaks - can our love endure except through sacrifices, through not demanding everything from one another; can you change the fact that you are not wholly mine, I not wholly thine - Oh God, look out into the beauties of nature and comfort your he

26、art with that which must be - Love demands everything and that very justly - thus it is to me with you, and you with me. But you forget so easily that I must live for me and for you; if we were wholly united you would feel the pain of it as little as I - My journey was a fearful one: I did not reach

27、 here until 4 oclock yesterday morning. Lacking horses the postcoach chose another route, but what an awful one; at the stage before the last I was warned not to travel at night; I was made fearful of the forest, but that only made me the more eager - and I was wrong. The coach must needs break down

28、 on the wretched road, a bottomless mud road. Without such postilions as I had with me I should have remained stuck in the road. Esterhazy, traveling the usual road here, had the same fate with eight horses that I had with four - yet I got some pleasure out of it, as I always do when I successfully overcome difficulties - Now a quick change to things internal from things external. We shall surely see each other soon; moreover, today I cannot share with you the thoughts I have had during these last few days touching my own life - If our hearts were always close together,

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