His tongue is no slander. [ Proverb ]
Slander leaves a score behind. [ Proverb ]
Slander flings stones at itself. [ Proverb ]
Slander is the balm of malignity. [ Chamfort ]
I hate the man who builds his name
On ruins of another's fame. [ Gay ]
Cut men's throats with whisperings. [ Ben Jonson ]
Slander is the solace of malignity. [ Joubert ]
Done to death by slanderous tongues. [ William Shakespeare ]
A generous confession disarms slander. [ Proverb ]
Slander expires at a good woman's door. [ Danish Proverb ]
There is no protection against slander. [ Moliere ]
Slander is a shipwreck by a dry tempest. [ English Proverb, collected by George Herbert ]
Speak not evil one of another, brethren. [ Bible ]
On Rumor's tongue continual slanders ride. [ William Shakespeare ]
Read not my blemishes in the world's report. [ William Shakespeare ]
No sword bites so fiercely as an evil tongue. [ Sir P. Sidney ]
A generous heart repairs a slanderous tongue. [ Homer ]
He that praises publicly will slander privately. [ Proverb ]
If you slander a dead man, you stab him in the grave. [ Proverb ]
Women should despise slander, and fear to provoke it. [ Mlle. de Scuderi ]
There is no sufficient recompense for an unjust slander. [ Proverb ]
It is a species of slander, to lessen the merits or exaggerate the failings of others. [ W. Gilpin ]
In retailing slander, we name the originator, in order to enjoy a pleasure without danger. [ Mme. de Puisieux ]
Neglect will banish love, kill a lie, and silence slander; yet it will feed a malady, nourish hatred, and fill a garden with weeds. [ E. P. Day ]
Slander and detraction can have no influence, can make no impression, upon the righteous Judge above. None to thy prejudice, but a sad and fatal one to their own. [ Thomas à Kempis ]