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Wit & Attitude Quote by John Milton

"Truth never comes into the world but like a bastard, to the ignominy of him that brought her birth"

About this Quote

Truth, Milton suggests, doesn’t arrive wearing a crown; it shows up looking illegitimate, shameful, and socially inconvenient. The line weaponizes a blunt, almost tabloid metaphor - “like a bastard” - to name a political reality: new or inconvenient truths are treated as scandal not because they’re false, but because they disrupt the story powerful people need to keep telling. By gendering truth as “her,” Milton also hints at how easily authority slips into paternal ownership: who gets to “bring” truth into the world, and who gets punished for it.

The phrasing matters. “Never” makes this less a complaint than a rule of human behavior. “Ignominy” shifts the drama from truth itself to the reputational cost paid by its messenger. Milton isn’t just romanticizing the lone truth-teller; he’s diagnosing how institutions maintain control: they can’t always suppress an idea, so they stigmatize its origin. Attack the parentage, not the child.

Context sharpens the edge. Milton wrote in the heat of England’s seventeenth-century battles over censorship, religious authority, and civil power (the era that produced his famous anti-licensing arguments). In that world, publishing the wrong thought could mean official ruin. This sentence anticipates a familiar modern playbook: discredit the whistleblower, sneer at the “source,” label the revelation “dirty,” and let the contamination narrative do the rest. Milton’s cynicism is strategic - he’s trying to steel the reader for the predictable backlash that follows any truth that actually matters.

Quote Details

TopicTruth
Source
Unverified source: The Doctrine and Discipline of Divorce (John Milton, 1643)
Text match: 94.74%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
Though this ill hap wait on her nativity, that shee never comes into the world, but like a Bastard, to the ignominy of him that brought her forth: till Time the Midwife rather then the mother of Truth, have washt and salted the Infant, declar’d her legitimat, and Churcht the father of his young M...
Other candidates (1)
Cracks in the Pavement (Martin Sanchez-Jankowski, 2008) compilation95.0%
... Truth never comes into the world but like a bastard, to the ignominy of him that brought her birth. John Milton, ...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Milton, John. (2026, March 1). Truth never comes into the world but like a bastard, to the ignominy of him that brought her birth. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/truth-never-comes-into-the-world-but-like-a-11579/

Chicago Style
Milton, John. "Truth never comes into the world but like a bastard, to the ignominy of him that brought her birth." FixQuotes. March 1, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/truth-never-comes-into-the-world-but-like-a-11579/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Truth never comes into the world but like a bastard, to the ignominy of him that brought her birth." FixQuotes, 1 Mar. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/truth-never-comes-into-the-world-but-like-a-11579/. Accessed 9 Mar. 2026.

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Truth Never Comes Into the World but Like a Bastard - Milton
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About the Author

John Milton

John Milton (December 9, 1608 - November 8, 1674) was a Poet from England.

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