Skip to main content

Daily Inspiration Quote by Claudius

"Say not always what you know, but always know what you say"

About this Quote

Power rarely collapses from ignorance; it collapses from loose talk. Claudius, an unlikely Roman emperor who rose through court intrigue and survived a family that treated murder like a hobby, compresses that lesson into a maxim that sounds polite and behaves like a weapon. "Say not always what you know" isn’t an endorsement of lying so much as a recognition that knowledge is leverage. In an imperial court, candor could be read as defiance, naivete, or invitation. Silence, by contrast, is a form of control: you ration information the way a state rations grain.

The second half is the moral counterweight, and it’s where the line gets its bite. "But always know what you say" demands deliberateness, not verbosity. Claudius isn’t praising the artful improviser; he’s warning against the casual remark that becomes evidence, the joke that becomes a faction, the promise that becomes policy. In a regime built on patronage and paranoia, words don’t just express intent, they create it. A sentence can start a prosecution, shift a succession plan, or make an ally look suddenly expendable.

The subtext is pragmatic governance, not self-help. It’s advice for surviving systems where everyone is listening, everyone is interpreting, and nobody is obligated to take you in good faith. Claudius frames speech as a liability unless it’s precise and purposeful. You can keep a secret and still be accountable; you can be strategic and still be responsible. That balance is what makes the line endure: it treats language as power that must be handled like power.

Quote Details

TopicWisdom
SourceHelp us find the source
More Quotes by Claudius Add to List
Know What You Say: Claudius on Speech and Restraint
Click to enlarge Portrait | Landscape

About the Author

Claudius

Claudius (10 BC - 54 AC) was a Leader from Rome.

5 more quotes available

View Profile

Similar Quotes

Loretta Swit, Actress
Karl Wilhelm Friedrich Schlegel, Poet
Karl Wilhelm Friedrich Schlegel