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Wit & Attitude Quote by Lydia M. Child

"The cure for all the ills and wrongs, the cares, the sorrows, and the crimes of humanity, all lie in the one word 'love'. It is the divine vitality that everywhere produces and restores life"

About this Quote

Child’s line is devotional in diction but political in intent: it takes a word often treated as private sentiment and recasts it as public medicine. The sheer pileup of nouns - ills, wrongs, cares, sorrows, crimes - works like a moral inventory. By refusing to rank suffering, she collapses the distance between the personal ache and the social atrocity, implying that the same underlying failure runs through both: a breakdown of recognition, responsibility, and kinship.

Calling love “the cure” is also a deliberate provocation from an activist steeped in America’s nineteenth-century reform culture, where abolition, women’s rights, and anti-poverty campaigns were constantly accused of being too radical, too disruptive, too angry. Child’s rhetoric answers that charge by offering a counter-moral authority: not vengeance, not mere law, but “divine vitality,” a phrase that fuses spiritual legitimacy with physical force. Love isn’t framed as softness; it’s energy, an engine that “produces and restores life.” That verb choice matters. Produces suggests creation, rebuilding social arrangements from the ground up. Restores suggests repair, a return to what humanity should have been but has failed to sustain.

The subtext is strategy. “One word” reads like simplicity, almost a slogan, but it’s also a demand that reform be rooted in sustained ethical attention rather than spectacle or purity tests. Child is arguing for a love that can bear consequence: the kind that insists on emancipation, education, and dignity not because the oppressed are perfect, but because life itself is sacred enough to be defended.

Quote Details

TopicLove
Source
Unverified source: Letters from New-York (Lydia M. Child, 1843)
Text match: 91.43%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
The cure for all the ills and wrongs, the cares, the sorrows, and crimes of humanity, all lie in that one word LOVE. It is the divine vitality that produces and restores life. To each and every one of us it gives the power of working miracles, if we will. (Letter XXVIII (dated 29 Sep 1842); page ...
Other candidates (1)
We: A Manifesto for Women Everywhere (Gillian Anderson, Jennifer Nadel, 2017) compilation99.1%
... The cure for all the ills and wrongs, the cares, the sorrows, and the crimes of humanity, all lie in the one word...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Child, Lydia M. (2026, February 9). The cure for all the ills and wrongs, the cares, the sorrows, and the crimes of humanity, all lie in the one word 'love'. It is the divine vitality that everywhere produces and restores life. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-cure-for-all-the-ills-and-wrongs-the-cares-168024/

Chicago Style
Child, Lydia M. "The cure for all the ills and wrongs, the cares, the sorrows, and the crimes of humanity, all lie in the one word 'love'. It is the divine vitality that everywhere produces and restores life." FixQuotes. February 9, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-cure-for-all-the-ills-and-wrongs-the-cares-168024/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"The cure for all the ills and wrongs, the cares, the sorrows, and the crimes of humanity, all lie in the one word 'love'. It is the divine vitality that everywhere produces and restores life." FixQuotes, 9 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-cure-for-all-the-ills-and-wrongs-the-cares-168024/. Accessed 21 Feb. 2026.

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About the Author

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Lydia M. Child (February 11, 1802 - October 20, 1880) was a Activist from USA.

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