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Taylor Swift’s Most Romantic Love Songs

The pop star is engaged and getting the fairy-tale romance she’s been writing about her entire career

Travis Kelce and Taylor Swift embrace on football pitch

EZRA SHAW/GETTY IMAGES

Love is one of Taylor Swift’s favorite things. When she was just 25, she admitted that she had already spent her “whole life tryin’ to put it into words.” From her debut album on, audiences have watched the songwriter process love, heartbreak, and everything before, after, and in-between. Her songs were often the perfect way to grapple with pain, but once she began to experience real love, she treated the topic with the same type of precision and passion as her break-up songs.

Now, Swift is newly engaged to partner Travis Kelce, embarking on the type of fairy-tale romance she dreamed of having since she was a girl. To celebrate the happy couple’s future nuptials, here are her 15 most romantic love songs.

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‘New Year’s Day’

The closing track off reputation is a delicate love song hidden on an album that’s supposed to be all about revenge. On it, Swift paints a glittery New Year’s Eve party to evoke the dichotomy of love and her all-encompassing devotion. She’s not just in this relationship for the thrill of a midnight kiss, she’s promising to stick around even when it gets hard. (Cleaning candle wax off hardwood floors does sound especially arduous.) The singer closes the track with a gentle plea: “Please don’t ever become a stranger whose laugh I could recognize anywhere.” It’s one of the most vulnerable, precious lines Swift has ever written. —M.G.

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‘Daylight’

Lover is packed with intimate scenes from a relationship: sneaking around the West Village and London, Christmas lights, paper rings. But the album itself ends with a step back, with Swift reflecting on what real love actually feels like after spending half her life writing about what she wants it to be. “Daylight” is a treat for any longtime fans, full of sly references to the ways in which she’s described romance and lust in the past. The most noticeable is the revelation that she “once believed love would be burning red” only to learn that it’s “golden, like daylight.” The track is tender and subdued, ending with a sobering, spoken epilogue where she declares the importance of being defined by what you love. —B.S.