Men who are thoroughly false and hollow, seldom try to hide those vices from themselves
 Charles Dickens, Barnaby Rudge (1841). copy citation

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Author Charles Dickens
Source Barnaby Rudge
Topic vice hiding
Date 1841
Language English
Reference
Note
Weblink http://www.gutenberg.org/files/917/917-h/917-h.htm

Context

“I should quite blush for myself before this stupendous creature, if remembering his precepts, one might blush at anything. An amazing man! a nobleman indeed! any King or Queen may make a Lord, but only the Devil himself—and the Graces—can make a Chesterfield.’ Men who are thoroughly false and hollow, seldom try to hide those vices from themselves; and yet in the very act of avowing them, they lay claim to the virtues they feign most to despise. ‘For,’ say they, ‘this is honesty, this is truth. All mankind are like us, but they have not the candour to avow it.’ The more they affect to deny the existence of any sincerity in the world, the more they would be thought to possess it in its boldest shape;” source