The Latin inscription at the lower left reads
AUT TACE AUT LOQUERE MELIORA SILENTIO, which translates to:
“Let thy speech be better than silence, or be silent.”
The painting is
Philosophy (from the 1640s), a self portrait by
Salvator Rosa, an Italian baroque painter who lived from 1615 to 1673. Those words originally came from
Dionysius of Halicarnassus.
On February 18, 2010 in his
Manner of Speaking blog John Zimmer used it as
No. 17 in his series of over 140
Quotes for Public Speakers.
On March 1st I blogged something similar:
Is your presentation more useful than a facial tissue?
The
image came from Wikimedia Commons.
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