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Life & Wisdom Quote by Samuel Taylor Coleridge

"A man's desire is for the woman, but the woman's desire is rarely other than for the desire of the man"

About this Quote

Coleridge takes a scalpel to romance and finds a hall of mirrors: male desire points outward, toward a woman as object; female desire, he argues, is forced inward, toward being desired. It’s an unromantic thought delivered with the cool assurance of someone who’s watched courtship turn into choreography. The line works because it’s built on asymmetry. The first clause sounds like a timeless truism, almost tender in its simplicity. The second clause snaps it into critique, suggesting that what passes for women’s “preference” is often a response to men’s appetite, not an appetite allowed to stand on its own.

The subtext isn’t just about sex. It’s about power and social legibility: in a culture where women’s security, reputation, and even survival are tethered to men’s approval, desire gets rerouted. To want a man directly can look like transgression; to want his wanting looks like virtue. Coleridge is diagnosing a feedback loop where male desire sets the terms of the game and female desire becomes a strategy for navigating it.

Context matters: Romantic-era Britain draped passion in poetry while keeping women hemmed in by marriage markets, inheritance laws, and strict codes of propriety. Coleridge, chronicling the era’s obsession with feeling, also sees how “feeling” can be staged. The bite in the sentence is its insinuation that heterosexual romance, as socially organized, manufactures women’s desire as a performance - a cultivated receptivity - and then mistakes that performance for nature.

Quote Details

TopicRomantic
Source
Verified source: Specimens of the Table Talk of Samuel Taylor Coleridge (Samuel Taylor Coleridge, 1835)
Text match: 96.08%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
The man's desire is for the woman; but the woman's desire is rarely other than for the desire of the man.[1]. This line appears in Coleridge’s posthumously published Table Talk, edited from conversation notes by Henry Nelson Coleridge. Many secondary references date the remark to 23 July 1827, but the readily verifiable primary publication is the 1835 first edition of Specimens of the Table Talk. A library catalog record for an 1835 edition is available via the Library of Congress. (The Gutenberg transcription shows the quote but not stable printed page numbers.)
Other candidates (1)
Men are Like Fish (Steve Nakamoto, 2002) compilation95.2%
... A man's desire is for the woman ; but the woman's desire is rarely other than for the desire of the man . " Samue...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Coleridge, Samuel Taylor. (2026, February 10). A man's desire is for the woman, but the woman's desire is rarely other than for the desire of the man. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/a-mans-desire-is-for-the-woman-but-the-womans-91893/

Chicago Style
Coleridge, Samuel Taylor. "A man's desire is for the woman, but the woman's desire is rarely other than for the desire of the man." FixQuotes. February 10, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/a-mans-desire-is-for-the-woman-but-the-womans-91893/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"A man's desire is for the woman, but the woman's desire is rarely other than for the desire of the man." FixQuotes, 10 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/a-mans-desire-is-for-the-woman-but-the-womans-91893/. Accessed 23 Feb. 2026.

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A mans desire is for the woman; womans desire is for his desire
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About the Author

Samuel Taylor Coleridge

Samuel Taylor Coleridge (October 21, 1772 - July 25, 1834) was a Poet from England.

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