"Silence is one of the hardest arguments to refute"
About this Quote
The line’s comedy comes from its mock-legal phrasing. Calling silence an “argument” is a sly category error. An argument is supposed to be made of reasons, but Billings points to how we treat absence as evidence anyway. Someone goes quiet and we rush to interpret: guilt, superiority, heartbreak, contempt, wisdom. Silence becomes a projection screen, and the listener supplies the content. That’s why it’s “hard” to refute: you’re fighting your own inference as much as the other person’s position.
Billings was writing in an era obsessed with public debate, moral lecturing, and performative oratory. His joke punctures that culture by elevating the non-performance. The subtext is both tactical and ethical: silence can be dignified restraint, but it can also be a power play, a way to dominate by withholding. Either way, it exposes an uncomfortable fact about persuasion: what feels like truth often arrives through pressure, not proof.
Quote Details
| Topic | Wisdom |
|---|---|
| Source | Verified source: The Complete Works of Josh Billings (Josh Billings, 1899)
Evidence: Silence iz one ov the hardest kind ov arguments tew refute. (p. 237 (also appears as p. 215 in another section of the same volume)). Primary text by Josh Billings (pen name of Henry W. Shaw). In the Project Gutenberg scan of the 1899 revised edition, the quote appears verbatim in Billings’ dialect spelling. The modernized form (“Silence is one of the hardest arguments to refute”) is a normalization of spelling (iz/is; ov/of; tew/to). This verifies the quote is genuinely in Billings’ own published writing, but this 1899 volume is a collected/revised edition and is not necessarily the FIRST publication. Within the same Gutenberg text, the line also appears elsewhere as “Silence is one of the hardest arguments to refute.” (without dialect spelling), indicating the compilation includes both dialect and standardized forms. For first-publication verification, you would need to trace this line to an earlier Josh Billings work/edition (often cited as an “Affurisms”/“Mollassis Kandy” context) in the 1860s–1870s; I did not fully confirm the earliest appearance date from a first-edition scan in the time available. Other candidates (1) Civilization's Quotations (Richard Alan Krieger, 2002) compilation95.0% ... Silence is one of the hardest arguments to refute . ” — Josh Billings “ Silence is the safest course for any man ... |
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Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Billings, Josh. (2026, February 13). Silence is one of the hardest arguments to refute. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/silence-is-one-of-the-hardest-arguments-to-refute-149845/
Chicago Style
Billings, Josh. "Silence is one of the hardest arguments to refute." FixQuotes. February 13, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/silence-is-one-of-the-hardest-arguments-to-refute-149845/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Silence is one of the hardest arguments to refute." FixQuotes, 13 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/silence-is-one-of-the-hardest-arguments-to-refute-149845/. Accessed 13 Feb. 2026.











