Silence is the sleep that nourishes wisdom.
Bacon wrote his Essays across decades of turbulent public life in Elizabethan and Jacobean England, serving as a lawyer, politician, and eventually Lord Chancellor while watching colleagues fall from favor and face ruin. He was a man surrounded by noise — court gossip, legal argument, political maneuvering — and he understood from hard experience that most of that noise led nowhere useful. This line appears in his essay "Of Discourse," where he was making a practical case that people who talk too much learn nothing, because you cannot absorb information while producing it. It speaks to silence not as a spiritual ideal but as a working strategy for anyone who wants to actually understand what is happening around them.
Reflection
Think about a conversation you had recently where you stopped listening. What did you miss because you were preparing your next response instead of hearing what the other person said?