Quotes about england

Cynthia Ozick -

In 1952, I had gone to England on a literary pilgrimage, but what I also saw, even at that distance from the blitz, were bombed-out ruins and an enervated society, while the continent was still, psychologically, in the grip of its recent atrocities.

Benny Bellamacina - Piddly Poems for Children

The sun doesn’t live in England it comes here on holiday when we’re all at work.

Gail Carriger - Waistcoats & Weaponry

That's a very murky position," objected Felix."So's the weather. But this is England, we must learn to live with uncertainty.

Stefan Bachmann - The Peculiar

Feathers fell from the sky. Like black snow, they drifted onto an old city called Bath.

Alison Weir - The Princes in the Tower

In the South of England northerners were regarded then as uncouth, brutish, undisciplined savages ...

P.D. James - A Taste for Death

It was one of those perfect English autumnal days which occur more frequently in memory than in life.

Natasha Pulley - The Watchmaker of Filigree Street

It is not summer, England doesn't have summer, it has continuous autumn with a fortnight's variation here and there.

Stan Barstow - A Kind of Loving

The days draw out, the weather gets warmer, and it's what we call summer, with a bitter laugh when we've said it.

Rudyard Kipling - The Light That Failed [Illustrated]

A thin grey fog hung over the city, and the streets were very cold; for summer was in England.

Anna Quindlen - Imagined London: A Tour of the World's Greatest Fictional City

In England I am always madam; I arrived too late to ever be a miss. In New York I have only been madamed once, by the doorman at the Carlyle Hotel.

Peter Hitchens -

Far too many people—many of them academics, many politicians—continue to jabber about a supposed 'special relationship' between our two coun

Christopher Hitchens - Hitch-22: A Memoir

[T]he hyphenation question is, and always has been and will be, different for English immigrants. One can be an Italian-American, a Greek-American, an Irish-American and so forth. (Jews for some reason prefer the words the other way around, as in 'American Jewish Congress' or 'American Jewish Committee.') And any of those groups can and does have a 'national day' parade on Fifth Avenue in New York. But there is no such thing as an 'English-American' let alone a 'British-American,' and one can on

P.J. Davitt - One Shot at Glory

Eight years in the Wolston academy and I knew it all came down to the next 90 minutes.

Amanda Craig - Hearts and Minds

But this city is a world of its own, a country within a country. People are used to taking the old and making it news; and used, too, to taking the new and making it old. Every glass of water from its taps, it is said, has passed six times through the kidneys of another, and every scrap of its land has been trodden on, fought over, dug up and broken down for centuries.

Blythe Danner -

I loved the first Christmas I had in England.

Nigel Newton -

England is a nation of voyeurs.

David Lloyd George -

Every man has a House of Lords in his own head. Fears prejudices misconceptions - those are the peers and they are hereditary.

Edmund C. Bentley -

George III ought never to have occurred. One can only wonder At so grotesque a blunder.

Henry Carey -

God save our Gracious King Long live our Noble King God save the King. Send Him victorious Happy and Glorious Long to rule over us God save the King.

Dean Acheson -

Great Britain has lost an empire and has not yet found a role.

Christopher North -

His Majesty's dominions on which the sun never sets.

Charles Lamb -

I have been trying all my life to like Scotchmen and am obliged to desist from the experiment in despair.

Rupert Brooke -

If I should die think only this of me that there's some corner of a foreign field that is for ever England.

George Bernard Shaw -

It is impossible for an Englishman to open his mouth without making some other Englishman despise him.

A. C. Benson -

Land of hope and glory Mother of the Free How shall we extol thee who are borne of thee? Wider still and wider shall thy bounds be set God who made thee mighty make thee mightier yet.

Benjamin Disraeli -

London is a roost for every bird.

Cecil Rhodes -

Remember that you are an Englishman and consequently have won first prize in the lottery of life.

James Thomson -

Rule Britannia Britannia rule the waves Britains never will be slaves.

Anthony Sampson -

Snobbery - the "pox Britannica"

William Hazlitt -

The difference between the vanity of a Frenchman and an Englishman seems to be this: The one thinks everything right that is French the other thinks everything wrong that is not English.

Lord Rosebery -

The Empire is a Commonwealth of nations.

Stevie Smith -

The English woman is so refined She has no bosom and no behind.

Frank Field -

The House of Lords is a model of how to care for the elderly.

Clement Attlee -

The House of Lords is like a glass of champagne that has stood for 5 days.

Truman Capote -

The most dangerous thing in the world is to make a friend of an Englishman because he'll come sleep in your closet rather than spend 10 shillings on a hotel.

D. H. Lawrence -

The young Cambridge group the group that stood for "freedom" and flannel trousers and flannel shirts open at the neck and a well-bred sort of emotional anarchy and a whispering murmuring sort of voice and an ultra-sensitive sort of manner.

Clark Ross Parker -

There will always be an England While there's a country lane Wherever there's a cottage small Beside a field of grain.

Anthony Burgess -

Without class differences England would cease to be the living theatre it is.

Thomas Appleton -

You must not miss Whitehall. At one end you'll find a statue of one of our kings who was beheaded at the other the monument to the man who did it. This is just an example of our attempts to be fair to everybody.

Lord Byron -

Though I love my country I do not love my countrymen.

Voltaire -

England has forty-two religions and only two sauces.

George Bernard Shaw -

England and America are two countries separated by the same language.

Bruce Gould -

In England I would rather be a man a horse a dog or a woman in that order. In America I think the order would be reversed.

George Santayana -

England is the paradise of individuality eccentricity heresy anomalies hobbies and humours.

Novalis -

Not only England but every Englishman is an island.

James Agate -

The English instinctively admire any man who has no talent and is modest about it.

David Ormsby Gore -

In the end it may well be that Britain will be more honoured by the historians for the way she disposed of an empire than for the way in which she acquired it.

Thomas Dibdin -

Oh it's a snug little island! A right little tight little island!

Cedric Hardwicke -

I regard England as my wife and America as my mistress.

Wilfrid Laurier -

The Englishman respects your opinions but he never thinks of your feelings.

Daniel O'Connell -

The Englishman has all the qualities of a poker except its occasional warmth.

Winston Churchill -

The English never draw a line without blurring it.

Lord Thomson of Fleet -

Socialism has been preached for so long the British people no longer have any sense of personal responsibility.

T. Augustine Arne -

Britain's best bulwarks are her wooden walls.

V. S. Pritchett -

Queen Victoria - a mixture of national landlady and actress.

Clement Attlee -

I think the British have the distinction above all other nations of being able to put new wine into old bottles without bursting them.

Margaret Halsey -

Whatever the rest of the world thinks of the English gentleman the English lady regards him apprehensively as something between God and a goat and equally formidable on both scores.

Raymond Postgate -

Deploring change is the unchangeable habit of all Englishmen. If you find any important figures who really like change such as Bernard Shaw Keir Hardie Lloyd George Selfridge or Disraeli you will find that they are not really English at all but Irish Scotch Welsh American or Jewish. Englishmen make changes sometimes great changes. But secretly or openly they always deplore them.

A. W. Smith -

Where there is one Englishman there is a garden. Where there are two Englishmen there will be a club. But this does not mean any falling off in the number of gardens. There will be three. The club will have one too.

Rudyard Kipling -

What should they know of England who only England know?

Philip Guedalla -

The Lord Chief Justice of England recently said that the greater part of his judicial time was spent investigating collisions between propelled vehicles each on its own side of the road each sounding its horn and each stationary.

Paul Gallico -

No one can be as calculatedly rude as the British which amazes Americans who do not understand studied insult and can only offer abuse as a substitute.

Alexander Woollcott -

The English have an extraordinary ability for flying into a great calm.

Robert Morley -

We are articulate but we are not particularly conversational. An Englishman won't talk for the sake of talking. He doesn't mind silence. But after the silence he sometimes says something.

Matthew Arnold -

The nice sense of measure is certainly not one of Nature's gifts to her English children ... we have all of us yielded to infatuation at some moment of our lives.

Ralph Waldo Emerson -

I find the Englishman to be him of all men who stands firmest in his shoes.

Patrick Campbell -

It seems to me that you can go sauntering along for a certain period telling the English some interesting things about themselves and then all at once it feels as if you had stepped on the prongs of a rake.

Marshall McLuhan -

One matter Englishmen don't think in the least funny is their happy consciousness of possessing a deep sense of humour.

Thomas Beecham -

The English may not like music but they absolutely love the noise it makes.

Frank Adcock -

That typically English characteristic for which there is no English name -esprit de corps.

Wendy Michener -

The British are just as keen to make money as the Americans but they prefer hypocrisy to a blatantly commercial attitude.

Hugh Mills -

Nothing unites the English like war. Nothing divides them like Picasso.

Hugh Casson -

The British love permanence more than they love beauty.

George Bernard Shaw -

An Englishman thinks he is moral when he is only uncomfortable.

Stephen Leacock -

The British are terribly lazy about fighting. They like to get it over and done with and then set up a game of cricket.

English proverb -

A Scotch mist may wet an Englishman to the skin.

Rupert Brooke -

If I should die think only this of me: That there's some corner of a foreign field That is forever England.

Elizabeth Barrett Browning -

Oh to be in England Now that April's there.

Marquis Caraccioli -

In England there are sixty different religions and only one sauce.

Winston Churchill -

I have nothing to offer but blood toil tears and sweat.

Charles Churchill -

Be England what she will With all her faults she is my country still.

Winston Churchill -

Let us therefore brace ourselves to our duties and so -bear ourselves that if the British Empire and its Commonwealth last for a thousand years men will still say "This was their finest hour."

Winston Churchill -

Never in the field of human conflict was so much owed by so many to so few.

Thomas Dibdin -

O it's a snug little island! A right little tight little island!

Benjamin Disraeli -

The English nation is never so great as in adversity.

Benjamin Disraeli -

We are indeed a nation of shopkeepers.

W. S. Gilbert -

For he might have been a Rooshian A French or Turk or Proosian Or perhaps Italian. But in spite of all temptations To belong to other nations He remains an Englishman.

W. E. Henley -

What have I done for you England my England? What is there I would not do England my own?

Voltaire -

Froth at the top dregs at bottom but the middle excellent.

William Shakespeare -

The royal throne of kings this scepter'd isle This earth of majesty this seat of Mars This other Eden demi-paradise This fortress built by nature for herself Against infection and the hand of war This happy breed of men this little world This precious stone set in the silver sea.

George Bernard Shaw -

fights you on patriotic principles he robs you on business principles he enslaves you on imperial principles.

James Thomson -

When Britain first at Heaven's command Arose from out the azure main This was the charter of the land And Guardian angels sung this strain "Rule Britannia! rule the waves Britons never will be slaves."

George Bernard Shaw -

An Englishman thinks he is moral when he is only uncomfortable.

Victor Hugo -

England has two books, the Bible and Shakespeare. England made Shakespeare,but the Bible made England.

Aporva Kala - Life... Love... Kumbh...

While in England write or get wrought rotten rusted.

Maryrose Wood - The Hidden Gallery

Nowadays, people resort to all kinds of activities in order to calm themselves after a stressful event: performing yoga poses in a sauna, leaping off bridges while tied to a bungee, killing imaginary zombies with imaginary weapons, and so forth. But in Miss Penelope Lumley's day, it was universally understood that there is nothing like a nice cup of tea to settle one's nerves in the aftermath of an adventure- a practice many would find well worth reviving.

Beryl Markham - West with the Night

From the time I arrived in British East Africa at the indifferent age of four and went through the barefoot stage of early youth hunting wild pig with the Nandi, later training racehorses for a living, and still later scouting Tanganyika and the waterless bush country between the Tana and Athi Rivers, by aeroplane, for elephant, I remained so happily provincial I was unable to discuss the boredom of being alive with any intelligence until I had gone to London and lived there for a year. Boredom,

M.J. Colewood -

Clear vision holds the key.

M.J. Colewood -

Let the game be ventured!

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