| Quote | Author | Source | Email Quote |
|---|
| "Heaven take my soul, and England keep my bones!" | William Shakespeare | King John |  |
| He does love prophesying a misfortune, does the average British ghost. Send him out to prognosticate trouble to somebody, and he is happy. | Jerome K. Jerome | Told After Supper |  |
| . . . as he had often forcibly argued, all experience tended to show that a man must die; and whether he died of a miserable old age in his own country, or prematurely of damp in the bottom of a foreign mine, was surely of little consequence, provided that by a change in his mode of life he benefited the British Empire. | John Galsworthy | The Forsyte Saga |  |
| "Now order the ranks, and fling wide the banners, for our souls are God's and our bodies the king's, and our swords for Saint George and for England!" | Sir Arthur Conan Doyle | The White Company |  |
| "We have had enough bobance and boasting," said Hordle John, rising and throwing off his doublet. "I will show you that there are better men left in England than ever went thieving to France." | Sir Arthur Conan Doyle | The White Company |  |
| "Once or twice in my career I feel that I have done more real harm by my discovery of the criminal than ever he had done by his crime. I have learned caution now, and I had rather play tricks with the law of England than with my own conscience." | Sir Arthur Conan Doyle | The Adventure of Abbey Grange |  |
| . . . the law of England is much more severe upon offences against property than against the person, as becomes a people whose ruling passion is money. | H. Rider Haggard | Allan Quatermain |  |
| Dame Ermyntrude Loring, wife, and mother of warriors, was herself a formidable figure. Tall and gaunt, with hard craggy features and intolerant dark eyes, even her snow-white hair and stooping back could not entirely remove the sense of fear which she inspired in those around her. Her thoughts and memories went back to harsher times, and she looked upon the England around her as a degenerate and effeminate land which had fallen away for the old standard of knightly courtesy and valor. | Sir Arthur Conan Doyle | Sir Nigel |  |
| He was a hero to his valet, who bullied him, and a terror to most of his relations, whom he bullied in turn. Only England could have produced him, and he always said that the country was going to the dogs. His principles were out of date, but there was a good deal to be said for his prejudices. | Oscar Wilde | The Picture of Dorian Gray |  |
| "I do not approve of anything that tampers with natural ignorance. Ignorance is like a delicate exotic fruit; touch it and the bloom is gone. The whole theory of modern education is radically unsound. Fortunately in England, at any rate, education produces no effect whatsoever. If it did, it would prove a serious danger to the upper classes, and probably lead to acts of violence in Grosvenor Square." | Oscar Wilde | The Importance of Being Earnest |  |