"Never take a solemn oath. People think you mean it"
About this Quote
Douglas lands the punch with a writer’s favorite weapon: social embarrassment. “Never take a solemn oath” sounds like old-world counsel, the kind of thing a sensible uncle might mutter over brandy. Then comes the twist: “People think you mean it.” The joke isn’t that oaths are meaningless; it’s that sincerity is dangerous because other people will treat it as a contract. Douglas is skewering the mismatch between performance and consequence. In polite society, solemnity is often a costume - a way to look reliable, honorable, transformed. The trap is that audiences respond to the costume, not the actor’s private reservations.
The intent is slyly defensive: don’t hand the crowd a weapon. An oath invites surveillance. Once you’ve sworn, everyone becomes a prosecutor, watching for the slip that proves you were never worthy of your own rhetoric. Douglas implies that social life runs on flexible understandings, not ironclad vows; the person who speaks in absolutes forces everyone else to do the same, and that’s when relationships curdle into accounting.
Context matters. Douglas, a cosmopolitan British writer with a reputation for hedonism and skepticism, lived through an era that prized moral certainties in public while tolerating endless private compromise. He isn’t celebrating dishonesty so much as mocking the Victorian-Edwardian appetite for grand declarations. The line warns that earnest language creates expectations you may not want - and that the real scandal is not breaking the oath, but ever having sounded sincere enough for people to believe you.
The intent is slyly defensive: don’t hand the crowd a weapon. An oath invites surveillance. Once you’ve sworn, everyone becomes a prosecutor, watching for the slip that proves you were never worthy of your own rhetoric. Douglas implies that social life runs on flexible understandings, not ironclad vows; the person who speaks in absolutes forces everyone else to do the same, and that’s when relationships curdle into accounting.
Context matters. Douglas, a cosmopolitan British writer with a reputation for hedonism and skepticism, lived through an era that prized moral certainties in public while tolerating endless private compromise. He isn’t celebrating dishonesty so much as mocking the Victorian-Edwardian appetite for grand declarations. The line warns that earnest language creates expectations you may not want - and that the real scandal is not breaking the oath, but ever having sounded sincere enough for people to believe you.
Quote Details
| Topic | Witty One-Liners |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
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