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Happiness Quote by Agnes Repplier

"Humor distorts nothing, and only false gods are laughed off their earthly pedestals"

About this Quote

Humor, Repplier suggests, is less a funhouse mirror than a kind of acid test. If laughter can topple a “god,” then that god was always made of cheap material: ego, fashion, cant, or authority posing as sacred truth. The line is an argument for comedy as moral instrumentation, not moral vandalism. It doesn’t “distort” reality; it exposes distortions already built into public reverence.

The phrasing does careful work. “False gods” borrows biblical heat, but the punch is social, not theological: the idols are earthly, manufactured, perched on “pedestals” that exist only because a crowd agrees not to notice the cracks. Repplier’s subtext is that genuine value survives ridicule because it doesn’t depend on intimidation or performance. Real virtue doesn’t need stage lighting. What needs protection from jokes is usually power without legitimacy.

Context matters: Repplier wrote in an America thick with late-Victorian pieties and early-20th-century mass persuasion, when respectability could operate like a muzzle. A woman writer making a case for humor’s legitimacy is also making space for dissent in a culture that treated seriousness as a credential and irreverence as bad breeding. The line defends satire’s social function: not to replace faith with sneering, but to clear away impostors so belief, ethics, and institutions can be held to a higher standard than mere solemnity.

Quote Details

TopicWitty One-Liners
Source
Verified source: Points of View (Agnes Repplier, 1891)
Text match: 99.62%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
For humor distorts nothing, and only false gods are laughed off their earthly pedestals. (Essay: "A Plea for Humor"; Page 28 in the Gutenberg transcription (original print pagination embedded)). This sentence appears in Agnes Repplier’s essay "A Plea for Humor" within her book Points of View (Boston and New York: Houghton, Mifflin and Company, 1891). In the Project Gutenberg HTML edition (transcribed from Internet Archive scans), the line occurs in the middle of the essay, immediately after a discussion of Lord Halifax and a quotation attributed to Hazlitt (“Ridicule is the test of truth”). The embedded original page number at the line break shows it as p. 28 in that edition.
Other candidates (1)
Humorous Wit (Djamel Ouis, 2020) compilation95.0%
... Humor distorts nothing, and only false gods are laughed off their earthly pedestals. Agnes Repplier Everything is...
Cite

Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Repplier, Agnes. (2026, February 13). Humor distorts nothing, and only false gods are laughed off their earthly pedestals. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/humor-distorts-nothing-and-only-false-gods-are-134291/

Chicago Style
Repplier, Agnes. "Humor distorts nothing, and only false gods are laughed off their earthly pedestals." FixQuotes. February 13, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/humor-distorts-nothing-and-only-false-gods-are-134291/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Humor distorts nothing, and only false gods are laughed off their earthly pedestals." FixQuotes, 13 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/humor-distorts-nothing-and-only-false-gods-are-134291/. Accessed 18 Feb. 2026.

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Agnes Repplier on Humor and False Gods
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About the Author

Agnes Repplier

Agnes Repplier (April 1, 1855 - November 15, 1950) was a Writer from USA.

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