It Is A Wise Child That Knows Its Own Father

Paternity is harder to establish with certainty than maternity, so recognising one's own father is a mark of unusual wisdom or insight. Often used ironically about uncertain parentage.

Examples:

  • It's a wise child that knows its own father — how wise does a child have to be to know its great-great-grandfather?

Origin: 1584, English; Shakespeare inverts it in The Merchant of Venice (1596)