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Life & Wisdom Quote by Joseph Epstein

"One serious drawback about letters is that, in order to get them, one must send some out. When it comes to the mail, I feel it is better to receive than to give"

About this Quote

Epstein turns the warm, civic ritual of correspondence into a deadpan confession of laziness, and that inversion is the whole joke. The line borrows the moral cadence of the Biblical maxim about giving and flips it into a petty, recognizable truth: the labor of sociability is real, and the rewards are unevenly distributed. Letters arrive as proof you matter to someone; sending them requires time, attention, and a willingness to risk silence in return. Epstein is admitting, with a wink, that he prefers the ego-stroking part of community to the maintenance work.

The specific intent is less to denounce letter-writing than to puncture the sentimental aura around it. In an era that romanticizes handwritten notes as nobler than “mere” digital messages, Epstein reminds you that the medium doesn’t eliminate the fundamental asymmetry: initiating contact costs more than basking in it. The subtext is a critique of how we outsource emotional responsibility. We want connection, but we want it frictionless, delivered, and ideally stamped with someone else’s effort.

Context matters: Epstein writes as an essayist steeped in the manners of an older literary culture, where letters once served as social currency and intellectual exchange. His quip lands because it treats that high-minded tradition like a household chore. The cynicism isn’t bleak; it’s bracing. By joking about his own stinginess, he exposes a common modern posture: craving intimacy while resenting the admin.

Quote Details

TopicWitty One-Liners
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On Letters: The Pleasure of Receiving
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About the Author

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Joseph Epstein (born January 9, 1937) is a Writer from USA.

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