every wise man’s mouth complimenting another wise man is a vase of honeyed gall.
 Victor Hugo, The Hunchback of Notre-Dame (1831). copy citation

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Author Victor Hugo
Source The Hunchback of Notre-Dame
Topic compliments mouth
Date 1831
Language English
Reference
Note Translation by Isabel F. Hapgood in 1888
Weblink http://www.gutenberg.org/files/2610/2610-h/2610-h.htm

Context

“There then ensued between the physician and the archdeacon one of those congratulatory prologues which, in accordance with custom, at that epoch preceded all conversations between learned men, and which did not prevent them from detesting each other in the most cordial manner in the world. However, it is the same nowadays; every wise man’s mouth complimenting another wise man is a vase of honeyed gall. Claude Frollo’s felicitations to Jacques Coictier bore reference principally to the temporal advantages which the worthy physician had found means to extract, in the course of his much envied career, from each malady of the king, an operation of alchemy much better and more certain than the pursuit of the philosopher’s stone.” source