| C.N. Douglas, comp. Forty Thousand Quotations: Prose and Poetical. 1917. | | | | Falsity |
| | | Splendidly mendacious. Horace. | 1 |
| False in one thing, false in everything. Law Maxim. | 2 |
| | Had she been true, |
| If Heaven would make me such another world |
| Of one entire and perfect chrysolite, |
| Id not have sold her for it. |
Shakespeare. | 3 |
| | As false |
| As air, as water, as wind, as sandy earth; |
| As fox to lamb; as wolf to heifers calf; |
| Pard to the hind, or stepdame to her son. |
Shakespeare. | 4 |
| He who is false to his fellow-man is also false to his Maker. Stahl. | 5 |
| False as the adulterate promises of favorites in power when poor men court them. Otway. | 6 |
| False-dealing travels a short road, and surely detected. William Penn. | 7 |
| | Stealing her soul with many vows of faith; |
| And neer a true one. |
Shakespeare. | 8 |
| False as stairs of sand. Shakespeare. | 9 |
| To be true is manly, chivalrous, Christian; to be false is mean, cowardly, devilish. Carlyle. | 10 |
| He seemed for dignity composed and high exploit; but all was false and hollow. Milton. | 11 |
| It is far better to be deceived than undeceived by those whom we tenderly love. La Rochefoucauld. | 12 |
| So the false spider, when her nets are spread, deep ambushed in her silent den does lie. Dryden. | 13 | | |
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