“When Wine Sinks, Words Swim” Quotations
In Wine there’s Truth... A well-hammered proverb. Herodotus: “As the wine sinks down, words swim atop.” ~Desiderius Erasmus
When the wine is in the words flow out. ~Herodotus, as quoted in Hugh Percy Jones, “Greek,” New Dictionary of Foreign Phrases and Classical Quotations, 1900
What soberness conceals drunkenness reveales... Erasmus cites to this purpose a sentence out of Herodotus, When wine sinks, words swim. ~John Ray, A Collection of English Proverbs, Whereunto are added Local Proverbs with their Explications, Old Proverbial Rhythmes, Less known or Exotick Proverbial Sentences, and Scottish Proverbs, 1670
When Wine sinks Words swim. ~Scottish proverb, in A Complete Collection of Scotish Proverbs Explained and made Intelligible to the English Reader, by James Kelly, 1721 [The great paremiologist Wolfgang Mieder lists this as English in World Proverbs, 1986.
When Wine sinks, Words swim. ~Gnomologia: Adagies and Proverbs; Wise Sentences and Witty Sayings, Ancient and Modern, Foreign and British, collected by Thomas Fuller, 1732
When wine sinks, words soom. ~Scottish Proverbs, collected and arranged by Andrew Henderson, 1832
The French say, “Lorsque le vin descend, les paroles remontent” (When wine goes down, words come up). ~Burton Stevenson, The Home Book of Quotations, 1948
Excessive loquacity is one of the first and most noticeable manifestations of vinous activity, therefore we are not surprised at the many references in proverbial literature to the intimate connection of tipple and talk... hence the opinion, dating from the very ancient times, that under the excitement of wine the natural character is disclosed. “When wine sinks, words swim” is a maxim at least as old as Herodotus. ~“Proverbs and Epigrams on Wine and Water,” Meliora, Vol. 9, No. 34, 1866
Democritus said — Truth lay buried low
Down in a well, whose opening none might know.
But if Truth’s hid in Wine, as proverbs tell,
I’ll warrant me the Germans find this well.
~John Owen (c.1564–1620s), Welsh epigrammatist [a.k.a. Audoenus
The plot is laid: if all things fall out right,
I shall as famous be by this exploit
As Scythian Tomyris by Cyrus’ death.
~William Shakespeare, Henry VI, Part I, c.1591
Acknowledgment — Thanks Bob for the inspiration to do this research.