A picture is worth a thousand words
Meaning
A picture tells a story just as well as a large amount of descriptive text.
Origin
This phrase emerged in the USA in the early part of the 20th century.
Its introduction is widely attributed to Frederick R. Barnard, who
published a piece commending the effectiveness of graphics in
advertising with the title "One look is worth a thousand words", in
Printer's Ink, December 1921. Barnard claimed the phrase's source to
be oriental by adding the text "so said a famous Japanese philosopher,
and he was right".
Printer's Ink printed another form of the phrase in March 1927, this
time suggesting a Chinese origin:
"Chinese proverb. One picture is worth ten thousand words."
The arbitrary escalation from 'one thousand' to 'ten thousand' and the
switching from Japan to China as the source leads us to smell a rat
with this derivation. In fact, Barnard didn't introduce the phrase -
his only contribution was the incorrect suggestion that the country of
origin was Japan or China. This has led to another popular belief
about the phrase, i.e. that it was coined by Confucius. It might fit
the Chinese-sounding 'Confucius he say' style, but the Chinese
derivation was pure invention.
Many things had been thought to be 'worth ten thousand words' well
before pictures got in on the act. For example:
"One timely deed is worth ten thousand words" - The Works of Mr. James
Thomson, 1802.
"That tear, good girl, is worth, ten thousand words" - The Trust: A
Comedy, in Five Acts, 1808.
"One fact well understood by observation, and well guided development,
is worth a thousand times more than a thousand words" - The American
Journal of Education, 1858.
The idea that a picture can convey what might take many words to
express was voiced by a character in Ivan S. Turgenev's novel Fathers
and Sons, 1862:
"The drawing shows me at one glance what might be spread over ten
pages in a book."
A similar idea was seen very widely in the USA from the early 20th
century, in adverts for Doan's Backache Kidney Pills, which included a
picture of a man holding his back and the text "Every picture tells a
story".
Neither of the above led directly to 'a picture is worth a thousand
words'. Who it was that married the 'worth ten thousand words' with
'picture' isn't known, but we do know that the phrase is American in
origin. It began to be used quite frequently in the US press from
around the 1920s onward. The earliest example that I can find is from
the text of an instructional talk given by the newspaper editor Arthur
Brisbane to the Syracuse Advertising Men's Club, in March 1911:
"Use a picture. It's worth a thousand words."
The little essay clocks in at 483 words. Perhaps I should have drawn
half a picture?
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