Who Originally Said 'Remain Silent And Be Thought A Fool'?

2026-04-21 18:10:19 199

4 Answers

Violet
Violet
2026-04-23 23:05:19
This quote's like that one friend who shows up at every party uninvited—ubiquitous but hard to pin down. While researching, I stumbled upon a 19th-century agricultural journal attributing it to 'an Eastern sage,' which feels appropriately vague. The real magic isn't in who said it first, but how it keeps adapting. My D&D group even has a running joke about 'rolling for wisdom checks before speaking.' Some truths just refuse to go out of style.
Felix
Felix
2026-04-25 11:45:06
That quote's been rattling around in my brain ever since I first heard it in high school debate club! The sentiment feels timeless, but tracking down its origin led me down a rabbit hole. Most sources attribute it to Abraham Lincoln, though there's no solid paper trail in his speeches or writings. It might actually be a paraphrased version of Proverbs 17:28—'Even a fool, when he holdeth his peace, is counted wise'—which makes sense given Lincoln's biblical fluency.

What fascinates me is how this idea keeps resurfacing across cultures. Confucius had a similar saying about silence and wisdom, and Shakespeare's Polonius spouts something comparable in 'Hamlet.' The persistence of this concept makes me wonder if we're all secretly terrified of sounding stupid—which, ironically, might be the wisest self-awareness of all.
Wyatt
Wyatt
2026-04-27 08:46:17
My grandma used to whip out this saying whenever my cousins and I started arguing at family dinners. She swore it came from 'some old president,' but I later discovered it's one of those quotes that everybody knows but nobody can properly source. The closest match is probably the biblical proverb, though Mark Twain gets miscredited with a snarkier version: 'Better to keep your mouth shut and appear stupid than open it and remove all doubt.' Honestly, both versions hit hard when you're scrolling through Twitter at 2AM.
Wesley
Wesley
2026-04-27 17:59:05
As a theater kid, I first encountered this idea in 'King Lear'—'Speak less than you know'—but the modern phrasing seems to be a mashup of ancient wisdom and American pragmatism. What's wild is how often it gets repackaged; I found a 1922 etiquette book warning young ladies that 'discretion is the better part of conversation.' The core message clearly transcends eras, whether you're navigating court politics or office small talk. Makes me wish historical figures had citation managers!
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