
You phoned me tonight - I walked on those telephone wires for two hours after holding your love like a parasol to balance me. - (Zelda to Scott, Fall 1930)
The only sadness is the living without you, without hearing the notes of your voice… (Scott to Zelda, 1934)
Why should graves make people feel in vain? Somehow I can’t find anything hopeless in having lived - All the broken columns and clasped hands and doves and angels mean romances - and in an hundred years I think I shall like having young people speculate on whether my eyes were brown or blue … I hope my grave has an air of many, many years ago about it - Isn’t it funny how, out of a row of Confederate soliders, two or three will make you think of dead lovers and dead loves. - (Zelda to Scott, 1919)
- Zelda Fitzgerald & F. Scott Fitzgerald’s love letters

The Oh-God-I’m-losing-the-love-of-my-life-forever pose.
Equally popular amongst Regency toffs, Victorian manufacturers and Edwardian lawyers.

“If there was anything going on, it didn’t last long because most of our time was taken up with work. It’s true that I had an enormous crush on him. But I was engaged at the time and I even had my wedding gown hanging in the wardrobe of my Roman hotel room. And Greg was married to Greta. I knew he wasn’t happy, that his marriage was not good even though they had three lovely children. Maybe he did feel something for me, maybe there was a little chemistry between us that made our scenes work. I was in Rome, being treated like a princess, and it was not difficult for me to believe I was the princess in the film, and it was not difficult for me to believe I was in love with Gregory Peck.”
Audrey Hepburn on her relationship with Gregory Peck during the filming of Roman Holiday (1953).
(Source: jewahl)