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Love Quote by Samuel Richardson

"Love gratified is love satisfied, and love satisfied is indifference begun"

About this Quote

Richardson needles the fantasy that love is a stable achievement. He frames desire like an engine that runs on lack: the moment love gets what it wants, it starts becoming something else. The line works because it’s structured like a syllogism, clean and cold, turning a romantic feeling into a logical trap. “Gratified” suggests a craving met; “satisfied” suggests the appetite quieted; “indifference begun” lands like the hangover. Romance, in this view, isn’t a glow you keep, it’s a tension you manage.

The subtext is less anti-love than anti-complacency. Richardson is warning that what people call devotion often depends on friction: distance, uncertainty, the chase, the narrative we tell ourselves about someone. Remove the suspense and you risk replacing intimacy with consumption. It’s an early diagnosis of a modern problem: when affection is treated like a reward to secure, it becomes vulnerable to boredom the instant it’s secured.

Context matters. Richardson’s novels (especially Pamela and Clarissa) are obsessed with courtship as a moral and social battleground, where women’s futures hinge on men’s pursuit and “successful” unions can still conceal power plays and disappointment. In a culture where marriage was both economic arrangement and reputation machine, the idea that fulfilled love curdles into indifference is not just cynical; it’s a critique of how society packages desire as an endpoint. Richardson implies the real work starts after the victory lap, when love no longer has obstacles to masquerade as proof.

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Love Gratified is Love Satisfied and Indifference Begun - Richardson
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About the Author

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Samuel Richardson (August 19, 1689 - July 4, 1761) was a Novelist from England.

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