"Love is love's reward"
About this Quote
Dryden’s line is a little philosophical grenade disguised as a Valentine. "Love is love’s reward" refuses the transactional logic that so often hijacks devotion: affection given in exchange for security, status, gratitude, or even a clean moral ledger. In its tight circularity, the phrase folds back on itself like a couplet snapping shut. The point isn’t that love will eventually pay off; the point is that the only payoff worth naming is the experience of loving itself.
That’s a distinctly Restoration move. Dryden wrote in a culture newly obsessed with appetite, performance, and social leverage after years of civil war austerity. In that world, “reward” is a loaded word: it suggests patronage, political favor, and the cash value of art. Dryden, who knew patronage’s humiliations intimately, repurposes the term to argue for a private economy where the currency can’t be minted by kings or crowds. Love, properly felt, becomes self-authorizing.
The subtext is both idealistic and defensive. If love’s reward is internal, then rejection, betrayal, or lack of recognition can’t fully bankrupt you. It’s also a sly ethical claim: love that demands external compensation isn’t love; it’s bargaining. The line works because it sounds serene while quietly throwing shade at every romance built on leverage. Dryden offers a standard that’s bracing, even suspiciously clean: love that needs prizes is already something else.
That’s a distinctly Restoration move. Dryden wrote in a culture newly obsessed with appetite, performance, and social leverage after years of civil war austerity. In that world, “reward” is a loaded word: it suggests patronage, political favor, and the cash value of art. Dryden, who knew patronage’s humiliations intimately, repurposes the term to argue for a private economy where the currency can’t be minted by kings or crowds. Love, properly felt, becomes self-authorizing.
The subtext is both idealistic and defensive. If love’s reward is internal, then rejection, betrayal, or lack of recognition can’t fully bankrupt you. It’s also a sly ethical claim: love that demands external compensation isn’t love; it’s bargaining. The line works because it sounds serene while quietly throwing shade at every romance built on leverage. Dryden offers a standard that’s bracing, even suspiciously clean: love that needs prizes is already something else.
Quote Details
| Topic | Love |
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