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Daily Inspiration Quote by Oscar Wilde

"I can resist everything except temptation"

About this Quote

Virtue, in Wilde's hands, is less a moral achievement than a social pose with bad lighting. "I can resist everything except temptation" turns the language of self-control into a punchline by treating temptation as the one force that actually tells the truth about desire. The line is engineered like a stage quip: it begins with the sober cadence of discipline ("I can resist everything") and then flips itself inside out, puncturing the very premise it just established. That reversal is the intent. Wilde is not confessing weakness; he's mocking the cultural theater that pretends restraint is more interesting than appetite.

The subtext is sharper than simple hedonism. Temptation here isn't just sex or sweets; it's the gravitational pull of beauty, novelty, pleasure, attention - the things polite society consumes while pretending not to. Wilde turns hypocrisy into elegance: if everyone is tempted, the only real sin is lying about it. The aphorism flatters the listener by letting them feel wicked and witty at the same time, a kind of moral alibi delivered with a smile.

Context matters: Wilde wrote from within a late-Victorian world obsessed with respectability, where "decency" functioned as class credential and surveillance system. His public persona - the aesthete as celebrity-provocateur - made epigrams like this both armor and weapon. The joke lands because it exposes a truth about power: rules often exist to be publicly performed, not privately obeyed. Wilde's brilliance is making that exposure sound like charm, right up until charm became evidence.

Quote Details

TopicWitty One-Liners
Source
Verified source: Lady Windermere’s Fan: A Play About a Good Woman (Oscar Wilde, 1893)
Text match: 96.67%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
I couldn’t help it. I can resist everything except temptation. (Act I). This line is spoken by Lord Darlington in Act I. The play premiered on 20 Feb 1892 at the St James’s Theatre in London, but the first book publication (first edition) is dated 1893 (London: Elkin Mathews and John Lane). As far as a verifiable primary-source publication goes, the earliest reliably documented publication is the 1893 printed edition.
Cite

Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Wilde, Oscar. (2026, February 9). I can resist everything except temptation. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/i-can-resist-everything-except-temptation-32622/

Chicago Style
Wilde, Oscar. "I can resist everything except temptation." FixQuotes. February 9, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/i-can-resist-everything-except-temptation-32622/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"I can resist everything except temptation." FixQuotes, 9 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/i-can-resist-everything-except-temptation-32622/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.

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I can resist everything except temptation - Oscar Wilde
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About the Author

Oscar Wilde

Oscar Wilde (October 16, 1854 - November 30, 1900) was a Dramatist from Ireland.

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