"The ability to quote is a serviceable substitute for wit"
About this Quote
Name-dropping is the social cheat code of the under-talented. Maugham’s line lands because it flatters and insults in the same breath: yes, quotation can be “serviceable,” a practical tool in conversation, but it’s also a “substitute,” the rhetorical equivalent of instant coffee. You can pass for sharp by borrowing someone else’s sparkle, especially in rooms where recognition counts as intelligence.
The subtext is about performance. Wit is risky; it requires timing, nerve, and originality, and it can fail in public. Quoting, by contrast, is pre-tested material. It lets you smuggle in authority and elegance without paying the cost of invention. Maugham, a playwright who understood dialogue as both art and weapon, is pricking the balloon of cultured talk: the salon game where everyone competes to sound incisive, but many are really just curators of other people’s lines.
Context matters. Maugham moved through the literate, class-conscious circuits of early 20th-century Britain, where being “well read” functioned as a social passport. In that world, quotation isn’t innocent; it’s a signal, a way to mark taste, education, and belonging. His phrasing is dryly moral without preaching: he doesn’t ban quoting, he demotes it. The joke is that even this thought is itself quote-worthy, a neat paradox that exposes how easily culture turns criticism into another collectible line.
The subtext is about performance. Wit is risky; it requires timing, nerve, and originality, and it can fail in public. Quoting, by contrast, is pre-tested material. It lets you smuggle in authority and elegance without paying the cost of invention. Maugham, a playwright who understood dialogue as both art and weapon, is pricking the balloon of cultured talk: the salon game where everyone competes to sound incisive, but many are really just curators of other people’s lines.
Context matters. Maugham moved through the literate, class-conscious circuits of early 20th-century Britain, where being “well read” functioned as a social passport. In that world, quotation isn’t innocent; it’s a signal, a way to mark taste, education, and belonging. His phrasing is dryly moral without preaching: he doesn’t ban quoting, he demotes it. The joke is that even this thought is itself quote-worthy, a neat paradox that exposes how easily culture turns criticism into another collectible line.
Quote Details
| Topic | Witty One-Liners |
|---|---|
| Source | W. Somerset Maugham — quote “The ability to quote is a serviceable substitute for wit.” (listed on Wikiquote: W. Somerset Maugham) |
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