"He was a bold man, that first eat an oyster"
About this Quote
Swift is needling two targets at once. On the surface, it’s a compact compliment to courage: the pioneer palate as heroism. Underneath, it’s a jab at how communities manufacture “taste.” Once the first eater survives, the oyster migrates from suspicion to delicacy, from shoreline weirdness to luxury. That social alchemy is the real subject. The “bold man” is also the first sucker: the one who risks poisoning so the rest of us can call it sophisticated.
Context matters. Swift wrote in a culture newly obsessed with improvement, science, and polite consumption - the same age that could build empires and still pretend it was all in the name of refinement. He specialized in exposing how easily lofty narratives cover base motives. The oyster works as a miniature of his larger satire: the Enlightenment faith in rational advancement is always shadowed by impulse, mimicry, and status-chasing.
The line’s staying power is its deadpan minimalism. It invites the reader to laugh, then realize the laugh is about us: our tendency to confuse inherited habits with inherent wisdom, and to treat yesterday’s gamble as today’s good taste.
Quote Details
| Topic | Witty One-Liners |
|---|---|
| Source | Verified source: Polite Conversation (Jonathan Swift, 1731)
Evidence: He was a bold man that first eat an oyster. (Dialogue II). This line appears as a spoken remark by the character 'Col.' (Colonel) in *Polite Conversation*, Dialogue II, as included in *The Works of the Rev. Jonathan Swift*, Volume 8 (shown on the Wikisource transcription as '1731'). In the scene, Lady Smart offers oysters before dinner and the Colonel says the line while taking an oyster. This is a primary-source appearance in Swift’s own work. I have not, in this search pass, verified whether an earlier (pre-1731) manuscript/circulation version exists; the earliest verifiable publication I can directly point to from the primary text provided here is 1731. Other candidates (1) Polite Conversation in Three Dialogues by Jonathan Swift ... (Jonathan Swift, 1892) compilation95.0% Jonathan Swift. Neverout . No , faith , Miss ; Three Meals a Day , and a good Supper at Night , will serve my Turn ..... |
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Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Swift, Jonathan. (2026, February 21). He was a bold man, that first eat an oyster. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/he-was-a-bold-man-that-first-eat-an-oyster-128819/
Chicago Style
Swift, Jonathan. "He was a bold man, that first eat an oyster." FixQuotes. February 21, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/he-was-a-bold-man-that-first-eat-an-oyster-128819/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"He was a bold man, that first eat an oyster." FixQuotes, 21 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/he-was-a-bold-man-that-first-eat-an-oyster-128819/. Accessed 25 Feb. 2026.














