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Daily Inspiration Quote by William Shakespeare

"How well he's read, to reason against reading!"

About this Quote

A delicious little jab: the mind trained by books using its polish to argue that books are useless. Shakespeare snaps the hypocrisy into focus with a single twist of phrasing. "How well he's read" is admiration with bared teeth; it grants the opponent competence only to make the next clause sting. The line weaponizes a paradox: anti-intellectualism often arrives dressed in the borrowed clothes of intellect.

Shakespeare is also playing theatergoer psychology. The audience recognizes the type instantly: the rhetorician who can quote, spar, and persuade, yet aims that skill at closing the very door that made him. It's not just contradiction; it's a performance of status. To "reason against reading" is to convert learning into a social cudgel, implying that one's own mind is so naturally sufficient it doesn't need the slow, democratic labor of study.

Context matters because Elizabethan England was anxious about what reading could do: spread heresy, seed sedition, scramble class boundaries. Books were power, and "reading" wasn't an innocent hobby; it was a technology of self-making. The subtext is that arguments against reading are rarely about reading. They're about control: who gets access to knowledge, who gets to interpret the world, who gets to speak with authority.

The wit lands because Shakespeare doesn't moralize. He simply spots the tell: if someone is eloquent in condemning books, books already won.

Quote Details

TopicKnowledge
Source
Verified source: Love's Labour's Lost (William Shakespeare, 1598)
Text match: 99.38%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
KING. How well he's read, to reason against reading! (Act 1, Scene 1 (line ~94 in many modern editions)). This line is spoken by the King of Navarre (King Ferdinand in many editions) in Act 1, Scene 1 of Shakespeare's play. The earliest known publication of the play is the 1598 quarto (Q1). Project Gutenberg reproduces the play text (not the 1598 quarto facsimile), but it verifies the wording and dramatic context of the line. To strictly document the *first publication*, you would ideally cite the 1598 quarto itself (a facsimile or scholarly transcription); however, that primary-quarto scan/transcription was not reliably retrievable in the current web search results I pulled, so I’m marking confidence as medium rather than high. The attribution to Shakespeare is not a misattribution; it’s a genuine Shakespeare line from Love’s Labour’s Lost.
Other candidates (1)
The Plays of William Shakespeare (William Shakespeare, 1806) compilation95.0%
... How well he's read , to reason against reading ! Dum . Proceeded well , to stop all good proceeding ! 1 Long . He...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Shakespeare, William. (2026, February 8). How well he's read, to reason against reading! FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/how-well-hes-read-to-reason-against-reading-33508/

Chicago Style
Shakespeare, William. "How well he's read, to reason against reading!" FixQuotes. February 8, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/how-well-hes-read-to-reason-against-reading-33508/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"How well he's read, to reason against reading!" FixQuotes, 8 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/how-well-hes-read-to-reason-against-reading-33508/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.

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About the Author

William Shakespeare

William Shakespeare (April 26, 1564 - April 23, 1616) was a Dramatist from England.

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