APAD: Honesty is the best policy.

来源: 2024-01-02 09:40:24 [博客] [旧帖] [给我悄悄话] 本文已被阅读:

Meaning:

Deception has many pitfalls so it is much better just to be honest

 

Background:

 

Some sources trace this idiom back to the early 17th century But, like so many

sayings, the sentiment dates back thousands of years and is found across

multiple continents.

 

The version perhaps best known to English speakers is a tale attributed to the

Greek storyteller Aesop about two woodcutters. The story goes that a woodcutter

accidentally dropped his beaten up old axe into the river. Seeing his livelihood

sinking to the bottom of the river, the woodcutter sat down on the bank and

sobbed. At which point Mercury, the messenger of the gods appears holding a

golden axe and asks if it belongs to the woodcutter. The woodcutter replies that

he wishes it did but it does not. Mercury disappears and reappears with a silver

axe, and asks the same question, to which the woodcutter says that sadly it

isn't because his axe is old and rusted. Again Mercury disappears and this time

returns with the woodcutter's own axe but in addition rewards him for his

honesty by presenting him with the gold and silver axes as well.

 

The woodcutter rushes home to tell his wife of his good fortune and soon the

story spreads. Before long, another woodcutter makes his way to the riverbank

and tosses in his axe. On cue, Mercury appears holding a golden axe and asks the

man if it is his. "Yes, yes," the lying man replies. At which Mercury tosses the

golden axe back into the water and says "I deny you that axe, and your own." The

man begs Mercury to please just return him his own axe so that he can support

his family. But Mercury leaves him empty handed--at which the woodcutter cries

out that honesty would have been the best policy.

 

Many famous Americans have used the idiom in their writings, including Benjamin

Franklin, Alexander Hamilton, Thomas Paine, Thomas Jefferson, John Quincy Adams,

James Monroe an Andrew Jackson. George Washington was particularly fond of it,

using it at least four times, including his farewell address to the nation: "I

hold the maxim no less applicable to public than to private affairs, that

honesty is always the best policy."

 

 

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