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Life & Mortality Quote by Arthur Miller

"A suicide kills two people, Maggie, that's what it's for!"

About this Quote

The line lands like a slap because it refuses the sentimental script we usually hand suicide: private pain, private exit. Miller makes it blunt, almost transactional: suicide as an act with a target. The “that’s what it’s for” is the real cruelty. It implies design, purpose, even a kind of grim craftsmanship. Whatever tenderness might have been available is replaced by accusation.

It’s also a power move in miniature. By addressing “Maggie” directly, the speaker drags a witness into the blast radius and assigns her a role: you don’t get to stand outside this; you will be implicated. Miller’s dialogue often turns domestic speech into moral courtroom testimony, and here the rhetoric is prosecutorial. Suicide becomes not just self-destruction but weaponized communication, a final argument meant to outlast the speaker.

The subtext is pure Miller: American life as a pressure cooker where pride, shame, and the need to be seen curdle into violence. In Death of a Salesman and beyond, the fear isn’t merely dying; it’s dying unheard, leaving no dent in the world. This line translates that fear into a terrible logic: if you can’t win love or recognition, you can still win consequence. You can still make someone pay attention.

That’s why it works theatrically. It doesn’t offer psychology; it offers motive, and motive is drama. The audience is forced to confront suicide not as a mystery but as a message written in blood, addressed to the living.

Quote Details

TopicMortality
Source
Unverified source: After the Fall (Arthur Miller, 1964)
Text match: 70.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
Act II (page varies by edition). The line is spoken by the character Quentin addressing Maggie in Arthur Miller’s play *After the Fall*. Multiple reputable references attribute it to the play and specifically to Act II. However, I could not reliably confirm a definitive page number in the *first*...
Other candidates (2)
Understanding Arthur Miller (Alice Griffin, 1996) compilation95.0%
... A suicide kills two people , Maggie , that's what it's for ! So I'm removing myself , and perhaps it will lose it...
Arthur Miller (Arthur Miller) compilation34.2%
st truths we know have come out of peoples suffering that the problem is not to
Cite

Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Miller, Arthur. (2026, January 14). A suicide kills two people, Maggie, that's what it's for! FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/a-suicide-kills-two-people-maggie-thats-what-its-6809/

Chicago Style
Miller, Arthur. "A suicide kills two people, Maggie, that's what it's for!" FixQuotes. January 14, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/a-suicide-kills-two-people-maggie-thats-what-its-6809/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"A suicide kills two people, Maggie, that's what it's for!" FixQuotes, 14 Jan. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/a-suicide-kills-two-people-maggie-thats-what-its-6809/. Accessed 29 Mar. 2026.

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About the Author

Arthur Miller

Arthur Miller (October 17, 1915 - February 10, 2005) was a Playwright from USA.

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