The last part, about generalizing across human experience. I've known people who've never appeared to take love all that seriously, at least in the years that I'd known them. (And they weren't particularly old--they just regarded romance as a game, generally one of deception.)
More importantly, there are people I know for whom the clock never wound down. And to examine another facet of my opposition, for me, there are a couple old loves out there for whom I feel the watch still ticks, but it just isn't so close to my heart. And the one I've had for a while now, it seems like it's solar-powered or something (with batteries for nights, dark rooms, and rainy days!), really I'm a human and can love, and I can keep things going.
I'm a BIG fan of this Romantic love, though, and believe it's the most important, and I do know that it can run out, and I do know it can be different for different people. I'm glad to have Sandburg (and you) on my side, as far as that goes. I wouldn't claim mine or Sandburg's experience of romantic love was better or worse than the other's (though I do have a prejudice against those who take it less seriously, preferring for example "automatic compassion", or even worse, a sort of cynicism that never allows it to bloom beyond an ironic pose in a game of "poker", if you know what I mean).



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