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Daily Inspiration Quote by Vittorio Alfieri

"Liars are always most disposed to swear"

About this Quote

Alfieri’s line lands like a snapped fan: elegant, quick, and meant to sting. “Swear” does double duty here. It’s the everyday oath of honesty (“I swear I’m telling the truth”) and the formal, public vow that props up courts, monarchies, and reputations. The point isn’t that liars merely lie; it’s that they overcompensate. They lean on ceremony the way a bad actor leans on volume. When truth is thin, performance thickens.

As an 18th-century dramatist steeped in the age of revolutions and collapsing legitimacy, Alfieri had reason to distrust the theater of power. Oaths were the glue of institutions that demanded belief: aristocratic honor codes, legal testimony, political allegiance. His cynicism targets the mechanism by which authority manufactures credibility. The liar’s “disposition” to swear suggests habit and instinct, not strategy; deception becomes reflexive, and so does the ritual that masks it.

The subtext is psychological but also political. Swearing is a demand on the listener: accept my claim not because it holds up, but because I’ve wrapped it in a sacred or social guarantee. It’s a subtle indictment of audiences too, of how easily we’re soothed by confident assurances, moral posturing, and the veneer of solemnity.

In drama, characters reveal themselves by their tells. Alfieri offers one: the extra oath, the unnecessary vow, the insistence that signals insecurity. The louder the pledge, the weaker the truth underneath.

Quote Details

TopicHonesty & Integrity
Source
Verified source: Virginia (Vittorio Alfieri, 1783)
Text match: 95.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
A giurar presti i mentitor son sempre. (Act II, Scene III). This is the original Italian line in Vittorio Alfieri’s tragedy "Virginia" (line spoken by Numitoria in Act II, Scene III). The commonly-circulated English wording "Liars are always most disposed to swear" is a translation/paraphrase of this line. In the Wikisource text, the line appears on the page marked [p. 237]. Note: Alfieri wrote the play in the late 18th century; Wikisource labels it "1777–1783" (composition range), so 1783 is a reasonable single-year reference for the work’s finalized form, but the *very first* print edition date would require confirming a specific early edition/bibliographic record.
Other candidates (1)
The Tragedies of Vittorio Alfieri (Vittorio Alfieri, 1876) compilation95.0%
... Liars are always most disposed to swear . Should what a Roman mother doth assert ( Yes , Roman and plebeian ) les...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Alfieri, Vittorio. (2026, February 19). Liars are always most disposed to swear. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/liars-are-always-most-disposed-to-swear-168663/

Chicago Style
Alfieri, Vittorio. "Liars are always most disposed to swear." FixQuotes. February 19, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/liars-are-always-most-disposed-to-swear-168663/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Liars are always most disposed to swear." FixQuotes, 19 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/liars-are-always-most-disposed-to-swear-168663/. Accessed 20 Feb. 2026.

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Liars Are Most Disposed to Swear - Vittorio Alfieri
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About the Author

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Vittorio Alfieri (January 16, 1749 - October 8, 1803) was a Dramatist from Italy.

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