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Politics & Power Quote by John Webster

"A politician is the devil's quilted anvil; he fashions all sins on him, and the blows are never heard"

About this Quote

Webster reaches for a grotesque, tactile image because ordinary contempt won’t do. Calling a politician “the devil’s quilted anvil” turns governance into infernal craftsmanship: the anvil is where metal gets beaten into shape, and here what’s being forged is vice itself. “Quilted” is the telling adjective. An anvil shouldn’t be soft; padding implies insulation, protection, the ability to absorb impact without showing damage. In other words, the politician becomes both tool and shield, the surface on which corruption is hammered into policy while the noise - the public outcry, the moral consequence - is muffled.

The second line sharpens the accusation with stage-ready economy. “He fashions all sins on him” shifts agency in a slippery way. The politician is passive enough to be used (“on him”), yet implicated enough to be indispensable. Webster’s subtext is that power doesn’t merely attract sin; it enables sin to take durable form. The devil doesn’t need an original idea, just a reliable instrument.

“And the blows are never heard” is the most modern part: an early diagnosis of what we’d now call plausible deniability and reputational management. Damage happens, decisions land, people suffer, yet the system is designed to keep the hammering offstage. In Webster’s Jacobean world - a court culture thick with patronage, espionage, and public piety masking private rot - politics is not a civic calling but a soundproofed workshop. The line isn’t just anti-politician; it’s anti-theater of accountability, where the worst violence is the kind that leaves no audible trace.

Quote Details

TopicJustice
Source
Verified source: The Tragedy of the Dutchesse of Malfy (John Webster, 1623)
Text match: 97.11%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
A politician is the devil’s quilted anvil, He fashions all sins on him, and the blows Are never heard; he may work in a lady’s chamber, As here for proof. (Act III, Scene ii (original 1623 quarto has unnumbered pages)). This line is spoken by Bosola immediately after the Duchess and Cariola exit in Act III, Scene ii. The earliest verifiable primary-source publication is the 1623 first printed edition (quarto) of Webster’s play, titled exactly as above. Although the play is commonly dated as first performed earlier (often c. 1614), the request was for first published/spoken; the first *published* occurrence is securely 1623. A publicly accessible transcription of the 1623 text is available via Wikisource (transcribed from the 1623 PDF). For a second, research-library primary-text witness, the Oxford Text Archive records the same 1623 text (ota:0631).
Other candidates (1)
John Webster John Addington Symonds. Duch . Thou art a superstitious fool : Prepare us instantly for our departure .....
Cite

Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Webster, John. (2026, February 16). A politician is the devil's quilted anvil; he fashions all sins on him, and the blows are never heard. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/a-politician-is-the-devils-quilted-anvil-he-158727/

Chicago Style
Webster, John. "A politician is the devil's quilted anvil; he fashions all sins on him, and the blows are never heard." FixQuotes. February 16, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/a-politician-is-the-devils-quilted-anvil-he-158727/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"A politician is the devil's quilted anvil; he fashions all sins on him, and the blows are never heard." FixQuotes, 16 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/a-politician-is-the-devils-quilted-anvil-he-158727/. Accessed 21 Feb. 2026.

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A politician is the devils quilted anvil; blows unheard
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About the Author

John Webster

John Webster (1578 AC - 1634 AC) was a Playwright from England.

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