If one tried to search for the meaning of the word love in a dictionary, the basic definition that would be found is: a deep affection for somebody or something. It would never define precisely what love is. Love is much more than just few lexemes. It goes beyond what words can express.
Love is a notion that cannot be grasped by the mind and certainly cannot be written in few words. How can hundreds of laughs that we shared with the ones whom we love be expressed in fixed, motionless symbols as letters? How can we allow thousands of heart-to-heart speeches to be omitted together with the warmth felt inside of them and let the remaining, cold words contract in one diminutive line? How can we define the most related word to God? God is love, thus wherever God is mentioned we always …show more content…
In other words, it is hard to be defined simply because it is a kind of feeling. If one takes this for granted, one must assume that this feeling is the most complicated one. Rumi says explaining his state of love: “I was dead, then alive. /Weeping, then laughing. /The power of love came into me, /and I/became fierce like a lion, /then tender like the evening star.” It is crystal clear from the number of contradicting imagery in the poem that love cannot be categorized with feelings. Having one feeling means not having the opposite. As a manifestation, if one is happy, he/she cannot be sad. Hence, it goes without saying that no one can tell when you are in love from certain characterizations. A lover may actually hate his beloved in a moment because of jealousy or the feeling that this love is unrequited. Furthermore, Bacon begins his essay on love by comparing it to the stage as it is filled with comedy, tragedy, mischief, and fury. Love here is compared to life as it is multidimensional and not easily to be grasped. Love is interrelated with