Love Sustains Itself
The chameleon Love can feed on the air.
Two Gentlemen of Verona,
Act II, Scene i
Chameleon Symbolism

The chameleon Love can feed on the air.
Two Gentlemen of Verona,
Act II, Scene i
Chameleon Symbolism

Away before me to sweet beds of flowers:
Love-thoughts lie rich when canopied with bowers.
-Twelfth Night,
Act I, Scene i

By heaven, I do love: and it hath taught me to rhyme
and to be melancholy.
-Love’s Labour’s Lost,
Act IV, Scene iii

I love thee…
By which honour I dare not swear thou lovest me;
Yet my blood begins to flatter me that thou dost.
-Henry V,
Act V, Scene iii

Do you not love me? do you not, indeed?
Well, do not then; for since you love me not,
I will not love myself. Do you not love me?
-Henry IV Part I,
Act II Scene iii

Upon thy cheek lay I this zealous kiss,
As seal to this indenture of my love.
-King John,
Act II, Scene i

The gifts she looks from me are pack’d and lock’d
Up in my heart; which I have given already,
But not deliver’d.
-The Winter’s Tale,
Act IV, Scene iv