Truth is always strange, stranger than fiction. Byron.

Truth is as impossible to be soiled by any outward touch as the sunbeam. Milton.

Truth is born with us; and we must do violence to nature, to shake off our veracity. St. Evremond.

Truth is God's daughter. Pr.

Truth is never learned, in any department of industry, by arguing, but by working and observing. Ruskin.

Truth is one, for ever absolute, but opinion is truth filtered through the moods, the blood, the dispositions of the spectator. Wendell Phillips.

Truth is quite beyond the reach of satire. 5 Lowell.

Truth is simple and gives little trouble, but falsehood gives occasion for the frittering away of time and strength. Goethe.

Truth is simple indeed, but we have generally no small trouble in learning to apply it to any practical purpose. Goethe.

Truth is the body of God, and light his shadow. Plato.