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Love Quote by Charles Caleb Colton

"Friendship often ends in love; but love in friendship - never"

About this Quote

Colton lands the line like a trapdoor: friendship is the stable room you’re standing in; love is the sudden floor giving way. The aphorism’s sly power comes from its asymmetry. “Friendship often ends in love” sounds almost tender, even inevitable, as if affection naturally intensifies when two people have the time and safety to see each other clearly. Then he snaps the hinge: “but love in friendship - never.” The dash is doing work here, mimicking the pause of someone who’s watched the reversal fail in real time.

Intent-wise, it’s less a romantic maxim than a warning about social physics. Colton isn’t claiming people can’t remain friends after love; he’s suggesting love is a contaminant to the category “friendship” as his era defined it: a respectable, ordered bond with rules, distance, and durability. Once desire enters, the relationship is reclassified. The Victorian-adjacent subtext is reputational: love isn’t just a feeling, it’s a force that rearranges obligations, jealousy, ownership, and public perception. Friendship can graduate into romance without scandal; romance demoted into friendship reads like rejection.

Context matters. Early 19th-century moral writers trafficked in neat, quotable certainties that disciplined messy human behavior. Colton’s sentence performs that discipline while smuggling in a darker observation: intimacy is rarely reversible. The line flatters friendship as pure, but it also exposes how fragile it becomes once it’s been asked to carry the weight of eros. It’s cynical, yes, but also psychologically astute: we’re not hurt by losing “a lover” in the abstract; we’re hurt because we can’t un-know what the relationship promised.

Quote Details

TopicFriendship
Source
Verified source: Lacon; or, Many Things in Few Words (3rd ed.) (Charles Caleb Colton, 1820)
Text match: 100.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
Friendship often ends in love; but love in friendship, never. (Aphorism CCCL (printed page 163; PDF page 168)). Primary-source verification in Colton’s own work: the quote appears as aphorism number "CCCL" in the 1820 third edition of "Lacon; or, Many Things in Few Words". In the scanned PDF, it is located on PDF page 168, where it is printed on the book page headed "IN FEW WORDS. 163". This supports attribution to Charles Caleb Colton. (Some secondary sites also cite 'Vol. II; LXXXIII', but in this verified 1820 3rd-edition scan the quote is under CCCL, not under LXXXIII.)
Other candidates (1)
Friendship (Herb Galewitz, 2012) compilation95.0%
... Friendship often ends in love ; but love in friendship - never . Our very best friends have a tincture of jealous...
Cite

Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Colton, Charles Caleb. (2026, February 13). Friendship often ends in love; but love in friendship - never. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/friendship-often-ends-in-love-but-love-in-134304/

Chicago Style
Colton, Charles Caleb. "Friendship often ends in love; but love in friendship - never." FixQuotes. February 13, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/friendship-often-ends-in-love-but-love-in-134304/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Friendship often ends in love; but love in friendship - never." FixQuotes, 13 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/friendship-often-ends-in-love-but-love-in-134304/. Accessed 21 Feb. 2026.

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Friendship Often Ends in Love - Colton's Insightful Quote
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About the Author

Charles Caleb Colton

Charles Caleb Colton (January 1, 1780 - January 1, 1832) was a Writer from England.

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