I flatter myself you and I shall meet again.—Smollett.
You and I are farmers; we never talk politics.—D. Webster.
Ah, brother! only I and thou
Are left of all that circle now.
—Whittier.
You and I are tolerably modest people.—Thackeray.
Cocke and I have felt it in our bones—Gammer Gurton's Needle
With adversative or disjunctive connectives.
444. When the subjects, of different persons, are connected by adversative or disjunctive conjunctions, the verb usually agrees with the pronoun nearest to it; for example,—
Neither you nor I should be a bit the better or wiser.—Ruskin.
If she or you are resolved to be miserable.—Goldsmith.
Nothing which Mr. Pattison or I have said.—M. Arnold.