LYING QUOTES IX

quotations about lies and lying

On the whole, lying is a cheerful affair. Embellishments are intended to give pleasure. People long to tell you what they imagine you want to hear. They want to amuse you; they want to amuse themselves; they want to show you a good time. This is beyond hospitality. This is art.

ISABEL FONSECA

Bury Me Standing: The Gypsies and Their Journey


These lies are like the father that begets them; gross as a mountain, open, palpable.

WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE

Henry IV, Part I


Falsehood has a perennial spring.

EDMUND BURKE

speech on American Taxation, 1774

Tags: Edmund Burke


As ten millions of circles can never make a square, so the united voice of myriads cannot lend the smallest foundation to falsehood.

OLIVER GOLDSMITH

The Vicar of Wakefield

Tags: Oliver Goldsmith


With the beginning of life, comes the thirst for truth, whereas the ability to lie is gradually acquired in the process of trying to stay alive.

GAO XINGJIAN

"Literature as Testimony: The Search for Truth", Witness Literature: Proceedings of the Nobel Centennial Symposium

Tags: Gao Xingjian


Excellent speech becomes not a fool: much less do lying lips a prince.

BIBLE

Proverbs 17:7


A lie gets halfway around the world before the truth has a chance to get its pants on.

WINSTON CHURCHILL

attributed, Winston Churchill's Great Quotation Book: From Alamein to Zest for Life

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A lie should be trampled on and extinguished wherever found; I am for fumigating the atmosphere when I suspect that falsehood, like pestilence, breathes around me.

T. CARLYLE

attributed, Many Thoughts of Many Minds


There never was a liar that had not a spot in him where he could not help admiring truth.

HENRY WARD BEECHER

Proverbs from Plymouth Pulpit


We all know that a lie needs no other grounds, than the invention of the liar; and to take for granted as truth, all that is alleged against the fame of others, is a species of credulity, that men would blush at on any other subject.

JANE PORTER

Aphorisms of Sir Philip Sidney: With Remarks


The thing that you know to be true is the lie that will kill you.

GLEN COOK

Soldiers Live

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Ask me no questions, and I'll tell you no fibs.

OLIVER GOLDSMITH

She Stoops to Conquer

Tags: Oliver Goldsmith


We need falsifications to make the past inhabitable.

FRANS KELLENDONK

Het Complete Werk


I lie to myself all the time. But I never believe me.

S. E. HINTON

The Outsiders


For the wretched conceit of a liar, in supposing himself clever enough to invent stories so ingenious that they shall, for any time, impose on people for the truth, and the still grosser folly in imagining, as he must do, that the world will, without investigation and analysis, take for granted anything he chooses to assert--that world more shrewd, more cunning, and as prying as himself--what a conceited ass must the liar be! How superior over others in cunning must he not believe himself! What fools must he not suppose the rest of mankind!

CHARLES WILLIAM DAY

The Maxims, Experiences, and Observations of Agogos

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All lies, white or black, disgrace a gentleman, although I grant there is a difference: to say the least of it, it is a dangerous habit, for white lies are but the gentleman ushers to black ones.

FREDERICK MARRYAT

Peter Simple


I never lie ... at least not to those I don't love.

ANNE RICE

The Vampire Lestat

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There are some disguised falsehoods so like truths, that 'twould be to judge ill not to be deceived by them.

FRANÇOIS DE LA ROCHEFOUCAULD

Moral Maxims

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There be three degrees of this hiding and veiling of a man's self. The first, closeness, reservation, and secrecy; when a man leaveth himself without observation, or without hold to be taken, what he is. The second, dissimulation, in the negative; when a man lets fall signs and arguments, that he is not, that he is. And the third, simulation, in the affirmative; when a man industriously and expressly feigns and pretends to be, that he is not.

SIR FRANCIS BACON

"Of Simulation and Dissimulation", Essays, or Counsels Civil and Moral


The lie that flatters I abhor the most.

WILLIAM COWPER

Table Talk

Tags: William Cowper