Authors: Matthew; Parris
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Class and Courtesy
Actually I vote Labour, but my butler's a Tory.
Earl Mountbatten to a canvasser during the 1945 election
The difference between us is that my family begins with me, whereas yours ends with you.
Iphicrates, Athenian general and the son of a cobbler, replying to a descendant of the Athenian hero Harmodius who mocked his lowly origins
Of course they have, or I wouldn't be talking to you.
Barbara Cartland, when asked by BBC reporter Sandra Harris in a radio interview whether she thought English class barriers had broken down
You can't expect a boy to be vicious till he's been to a good school.
Saki
Aristocrats spend their childhood being beaten by fierce nannies and their later years murdering wildlife, so it's hardly surprising their sex lives are a bit cock-eyed.
Jilly Cooper,
Men and Super Men
In the British aristocracy the gene pool has always had a shallow end.
Former US ambassador Raymond Seitz
The English aristocracy is a wonderful institution, not for its power, which is nothing, nor for its achievements, which are few, but for the gigantic impression it is able to make upon weak minds. Practically, its power has dwindled to the prerogative of occasionally obstructing a theological measure for a limited period ⦠[but it is] one of the stock nightmares of morbid brains. It takes its place with Antichrist and irremissible sin among the dismal spectres that haunt a disturbed imagination.
Lord Salisbury
He was educated at Eton and at Oxford, so Watson, bring the gun.
Sherlock Holmes
These bloody people. I can't bear that man. I mean, he's so awful, he really is.
Prince Charles on Royal Correspondent, Nicholas Witchell
Good breeding consists in concealing how much we think of ourselves and how little we think of the other person.
Mark Twain
Good manners is the art of making people uncomfortable.
Craig Brown
How do you keep the natives off the booze long enough to get them past the test?
The Duke of Edinburgh to a driving instructor in Scotland
An aristocracy in a republic is like a chicken whose head has been cut off; it may run about in a lively way, but in fact it is dead.
Nancy Mitford,
Noblesse Oblige
How beastly the bourgeois is
especially the male of the species â â¦
Nicely groomed, like a mushroom
standing there so sleek and erect and eyeable â
And a fungus, living on the remains of bygone life
sucking his life out of the dead leaves of greater life than his own.
And even so, he's stale, he's been there too long.
Touch him, and you'll find he's all gone inside
just like an old mushroom, all wormy inside, and hollow
under a smooth skin and an upright appearance.
Full of seething, wormy, hollow feelings
rather nasty â
How beastly the bourgeois is! â¦
D.H. Lawrence,
Pansies,
How beastly the bourgeois is
The bourgeois prefers comfort to pleasure, convenience to liberty, and a pleasant temperature to the deathly inner consuming fire.
Hermann Hesse
Poor Matt. He's gone to heaven, no doubt, but he won't like God.
Robert Louis Stevenson on Matthew Arnold
Let them eat cake.
Marie-Antoinette repeating an old saying when told the people had no bread to eat
Voting and buying drugs: the two activities that will drag a professional person into a place where people live on land owned by the council.
Giles Coren in
The Times
If you've seen one city slum you've seen them all.
Spiro T. Agnew
MY LORD, â Now I am recovering from an illness of several months' duration, aggravated no little by your lordship's rude reception of me at the Cascine, in presence of my family and innumerable Florentines. I must remind you in the gentlest terms of the occurrence. We are both of us old men, my lord, and are verging on decrepitude and imbecility. Else my note might be more energetic. I am not unobservant of distinctions. You, by the favour of a minister, are Marquis of Normanby, I by the grace of God am.
WALTER SAVAGE LANDOR
W.S. Landor, letter to Lord Normanby, who had cut him
I've been offered titles, but I think they get one into disreputable company.
George Bernard Shaw
When you are down and out, something always turns up â and it is usually the noses of your friends.
Orson Welles
Not really. Experience has taught us that those who matter don't mind and those who mind don't matter.
Ambassador to a dinner guest who had forced her fellow guests to swap seats after discovering precedence ought to accord her a place closer to the Ambassador. She had said to him: âI expect you find these questions of precedence very troublesome, Your Excellency.'
We invite people like that to tea, but we don't marry them.
Lady Chetwode on her future son-in-law, John Betjeman
I would rather cry in the back of a BMW than laugh on your bicycle.
Chinese reality TV contestant
What you need is a couple of aspirates.
F.E. Smith to Jimmy Thomas, who never pronounced his h's. He had complained of an 'eadache
No writer before the middle of the 19th century wrote about the working classes other than a grotesque or as pastoral
decoration. Then when they were given the vote certain writers started to suck up to them.
Evelyn Waugh
Like most liberals, I will do anything for the working classes, anything â apart from mix with them.
Kevin Day
I never knew the working classes had such white skins.
Lord Curzon, seeing some troops bathing during the First World War
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Kings, Queens and Commoners
Becket parts company from Henry II and Louis VII, after a stormy meeting.
From
The Becket Leaves
A hereditary monarch is as absurd a proposition as a hereditary doctor or mathematician.
Thomas Paine
⦠a pig, an ass, a dunghill, the spawn of an adder, a basilisk, a lying buffoon, a mad fool with a frothy mouth ⦠a lubberly ass ⦠a frantic madman â¦
Martin Luther on Henry VIII
Because half-a-dozen grasshoppers under a fern make the field ring with their importunate chink, whilst thousands of great cattle, reposed beneath the shadow of the British oak, chew the cud and are silent, pray do not imagine that those who make the noise are the only inhabitants of the field; that of course they are many in number; or that, after all, they are other than the little shrivelled, meagre, hopping, though loud and troublesome insects of the hour.
Edmund Burke
It is the folly of too many, to mistake the echo of a London coffee-house for the voice of the kingdom.
Jonathan Swift
One has often wondered whether upon the whole earth there is anything so unintelligent, so unapt to perceive how the world is really going, as an ordinary young Englishman of our upper classes.
Matthew Arnold,
Culture and Anarchy
The aristocratic disdain for work is the one legacy they've left that's really worth something.
John Cooper Clarke
The king blew his nose twice, and wiped the royal perspiration repeatedly from a face which is probably the largest uncivilized spot in England.
Oliver Wendell Holmes on William IV
Good-morning, gentlemen both.
Elizabeth I, addressing a group of eighteen tailors
To promote a Woman to beare rule, superioritie, dominion, or empire above any Realme, nation, or Citie, is repugnant to nature; contumelie to God, a thing most contrarious to his reveled will and approved ordinance; and finallie, it is the subversion of good Order, of all equitie and justice ⦠For who can denie but it is repugneth to nature, that the blind shall be appointed to leade and conduct such as do see? That the weake, the sicke, and impotent persons shall norishe and kepe the hole and the strong? And finallie, that the foolishe, madde, and phrenetike shall governe the discrete, and give counsel to such as be of sober mind? Of such be all women, compared unto man in bearing of authoritie. For their sight in civile regiment is but blindness; their strength, weakness; their counsel, foolishness; and judgement, phrensie, if it be rightlie considered â¦
John Knox,
First Blast of the Trumpet against the Monstrous Regiment of Women
The most notorious whore in all the world.
Peter Wentworth on Mary Queen of Scots
Most gracious Queen we thee implore
To Go Away and sin no more
But if that effort be too great
To go away, at any rate.
Anonymous epigram on Queen Caroline, wife of George IV
The bloom of her ugliness is going off.
Colonel Disbrowe on the ageing looks of Queen Charlotte
Beauty is only skin deep, but ugliness goes clean to the bone.
Dorothy Parker
Anne ⦠when in good humour, was meekly stupid, and when in bad humour, was sulkily stupid.
Thomas Babington Macaulay on Queen Anne
One of the smallest people ever set in a great place.
Walter Bagehot on Queen Anne
The wisest fool in Christendom.
Henri IV of France on James I of England. Attrib.
One of the moral monsters of history.
Samuel Taylor Coleridge on Charles II
Henry VIII perhaps approached as nearly to the ideal standard of perfect wickedness as the infirmities of human nature will allow.
Sir James Mackintosh
A blot of blood and grease upon the History of England.
Charles Dickens on Henry VIII
Here lies our mutton-loving King
Whose word no man relies on
Who never said a foolish thing
And never did a wise one.
John Wilmot on Charles II
This is very true: for my words are my own, and my actions are my ministers.
Charles II
Throughout the greater part of his life, George III was a kind of consecrated obstruction.
Walter Bagehot
The Radical MP John Wilkes at a formal dinner in the presence of the Prince of Wales proposed a toast to the King's health, a thing which no one had ever known him do before. The Prince asked Wilkes how long he had shown such concern for his father's well-being. Wilkes replied: âSince I had the pleasure of your Royal Highness's acquaintance.'
John Wilkes on the Prince of Wales, later on George IV
The two most powerful men in Russia are Tsar Nicholas II and the last person who spoke to him.
Anonymous
Never was a person less mourned by his fellow men than the late King ⦠if ever George IV had a friend, a true friend, in any social class, so we may claim that his or her name never reached our ears.
The Times,
commentary
Who's your fat friend?
George âBeau' Brummell to Beau Nash, who had introduced the Prince Regent
Queen Victoria was like a great paperweight that for half a century sat upon men's minds, and when she was removed their ideas began to blow all over the place haphazardly.
H.G. Wells
Strip your Louis Quatorze of his king gear and there is left nothing but a poor forked radish with a head fantastically carved.
Thomas Carlyle on Louis XIV
Nowadays, a parlour maid as ignorant as Queen Victoria was when she came to the throne, would be classed as mentally defective.
George Bernard Shaw on Queen Victoria
Very sorry can't come. Lie follows by post.
Telegram from Charles Beresford to the Prince of Wales, later Edward VIII, following a dinner invitation at short notice
No thank you; I only smoke on special occasions.
Anonymous commoner, confused and overawed, on being asked by George VI at a banquet whether he cared for a cigar
Thank God for the Civil Service.
George VI on Labour's 1945 election victory
Born into the ranks of the working class, the new King's most likely fate would have been that of a street-corner loafer.
James Keir Hardie, Labour leader, on George V
For seventeen years he did nothing at all but kill animals and stick in stamps.
Harold Nicolson, biographer of George V, on his subject
My father was frightened of his mother, I was frightened of my father, and I am damned well going to see to it that my children are frightened of me.
King George V
He will go from resort to resort getting more tanned and more tired.
Westbrook Pegler on the abdication of Edward VIII, quoted by Alistair Cooke,
Six Men
God grant him peace and happiness but never understanding of what he has lost.
Stanley Baldwin on the abdication of Edward VIII
[A] wife capable of behaving in this way: tantrums and suicide charades â anyone trying to do it with paracetamol isn't trying â is a witless little girl unfit for marriage to anyone. And the wife capable of exploiting her position to get revenge through mass publicity is a destructive little chancer emotionally located in the foothills of adolescence. The footling story of Diana Spencer makes a bitter republican point, the liability of fairy tales to have been written by the Brothers Grimm! â¦
Charles has claims to be a victim of the Asiatic fixing of his family. No wife brought from Karachi to Southall by imperious parents-in-law could better respect an arranged marriage than the English rose heavily urged for the Crown Prince. She was English (after much public scorn of the former Teutonic norm), a virgin and thus free from all tattle, and she looked good. The facts: that she is virtuoso of on-camera tears, that her delight in life is the nightclub and that she seems to have no mind at all, were disregarded. An intelligent man has been fettered in âa suitable marriage' to a frothball and has sought to live his life apart from her. What sharper intimation of the shabbiness of monarchy could there be?
There are many reasons for dispensing with monarchy, but two will suffice. The job could be done better; and monarchy, just by existing, induces pathetic impulses in other people. There has to be something wrong with an institution which assembles, in various degrees of competitive abjectness, Lord St John of Fawsley, in whom I have real difficulty believing, Sir Alastair Burnet and Lord Rees-Mogg.
These Firbankian grotesques, prime fruit of the trees of
deference, can be relied upon to squelch noisily under royal foot. Happy calling someone twenty years younger âSir' or âMaa-am' they proclaim a social pyramid in which their own status is secured by guileful proximity to the apex. They fawn and teach us to fawn. Unlike the late Richard Dimbleby, grand under-butler to the nation, they do not tell us that the Queen looks radiant, but they are lit by all the royal refection into which they can creep.
Such courtiers only echo the sick adoration of part of the nation. Royalty has done a roaring trade since the war in glossy iconic tosh, books about royal lives, houses, tours, weddings, ancestry and interior décor, books, God help us, about royal dogs. The appetite of silly people for living vicarious, reverential lives through this assembly of low-octane duds in jodhpurs is tragic.
Edward Pearce, the
Guardian,
âThe Aspirin of the People'
Prince Charles is an insensitive, hypocritical oaf and Princess Diana is a selfish, empty-headed bimbo. They should never have got married in the first place. I blame the parents.
Richard Littlejohn, in the
Sun
Harlot and trollop
Alleged remarks by Prince Philip in letter to Diana. Officially denied.
So thick and yet so thin.
Comedian Linda Smith on Princess Diana
A sort of social hand grenade, ready to explode, leaving unsuspecting playboys legless and broken.
Trevor Philips on the Princess of Wales, shortly before her death
Shea was a master of evasion, more slippery than a Jacuzzi full of KY jelly. You might say he was the first Sensitol-lubricated PR man â particularly appropriate when you consider where he has spent most of his life.
Richard Littlejohn on Michael Shea, the Queen's former press secretary, in the
Sun
I'm prepared to take advice on leisure from Prince Philip. He's a world expert on leisure. He's been practising for most of his adult life.
Neil Kinnock on Prince Philip, in the
Western Mail
Why don't you naff off!
Princess Anne to reporters, in the
Daily Mirror
He is a man of many ideas, most of them bad.
Oliver Kamm on Prince Charles
It's no wonder you're deaf.
Prince Philip, to children from the British Deaf Association as they stood next to a Caribbean steel band
My, you must have fun chasing the soap around the bath.
Diana, Princess of Wales, shaking hands with a one-armed man in Australia, 1983