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Aging & Wisdom Quote by John Galsworthy

"Love has no age, no limit; and no death"

About this Quote

Galsworthy frames love as a force that refuses the categories we use to make life legible: age, limit, death. It reads like a gentle aphorism, but it’s also a rebuke to the social bookkeeping that defined his world. In late-Victorian and Edwardian Britain, “age” wasn’t just chronology; it was permission. Who could desire, marry, inherit, stray, start over. “Limit” wasn’t just personal boundary; it was class, propriety, the quiet tyranny of what the neighbors might think. Galsworthy, a novelist preoccupied with how institutions police feeling, offers a line that slips the leash.

The craft is in the escalation. “No age” challenges sentimentality that quarantines love to the young. “No limit” goes after the idea that love should be rational, containable, proportionate to what society deems appropriate. Then “no death” lands as both consolation and provocation. It’s easy to hear it as spiritual comfort, love outlasting the body. It also works as a psychological truth: attachment persists, becoming memory, obsession, duty, grief, or a private mythology that keeps shaping the living.

There’s an implied argument against cynicism, but not a naive one. Galsworthy isn’t claiming love makes everything fine; he’s insisting it makes everything complicated. Love is portrayed as durable to the point of inconvenience, surviving not because it’s pure, but because it’s woven into identity. The line flatters the heart while quietly indicting the systems that pretend it can be regulated.

Quote Details

TopicLove
Source
Verified source: In Chancery (The Forsyte Saga, Volume II) (John Galsworthy, 1920)
Text match: 100.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
“Love has no age, no limit, and no death.” (Part III, Chapter VI , “A Summer Day” (page varies by edition)). This line appears as dialogue during the 'Indian Summer of a Forsyte' section within *In Chancery* (commonly published as Volume II of *The Forsyte Saga*). Many secondary quote sites reproduce it with a semicolon ("no limit; and no death"), but the text as shown in the Project Gutenberg transcription is: “Love has no age, no limit, and no death.” To identify the *first* publication: *In Chancery* was first published in 1920 (UK, Heinemann). Page number cannot be given reliably without the specific print edition because pagination differs widely across editions and omnibus printings.
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Galsworthy, John. (2026, February 7). Love has no age, no limit; and no death. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/love-has-no-age-no-limit-and-no-death-23701/

Chicago Style
Galsworthy, John. "Love has no age, no limit; and no death." FixQuotes. February 7, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/love-has-no-age-no-limit-and-no-death-23701/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Love has no age, no limit; and no death." FixQuotes, 7 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/love-has-no-age-no-limit-and-no-death-23701/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.

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About the Author

John Galsworthy

John Galsworthy (August 14, 1867 - January 31, 1933) was a Author from England.

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