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Irish Quotes
"Enjoy these Irish quotes"
Courtesy of:
Ireland Fun Facts
"I think there's a bit of the devil in everybody. There's
a bit of a priest in everybody, too, but I enjoyed playing the devil
more. He was more fun."
- Actor Gabriel Byrne
"Though the pen is mightier than the sword, the sword speaks louder
and stronger at any given moment."
- Leonard Wibberley, Irish author of comic novel "The Mouse That Roared"
"When I get a very generous introduction like that, I explain that I'm
emotionally moved, but on the other hand I'm Irish and the Irish are
very emotionally moved. My mother is Irish and she cries during beer
commercials."
- Former U.S. General Barry McCaffrey
"A Kerry footballer with an inferiority complex is one who thinks he's
just as good as everybody else."
- Author John B. Keane
"Ireland is a peculiar society in the sense that it was a nineteenth
century society up to about 1970 and then it almost bypassed the twentieth
century."
- Author John McGahern
"The immigrant's heart marches to the beat of two quite different drums,
one from the old homeland and the other from the new. The immigrant
has to bridge these two worlds, living comfortably in the new and bringing
the best of his or her ancient identity and heritage to bear on life
in an adopted homeland."
- Irish President McAleese
"Whether it be a matter of personal relations within a marriage or political
initiatives within a peace process, there is no sure-fire do-it-yourself
kit."
- Seamus Heaney
"I think the Irish woman was freed from slavery by bingo. They can go
out now, dressed up, with their handbags and have a drink and play bingo.
And they deserve it."
- Author John B. Keane
"Making peace, I have found, is much harder than making war."
- Gerry Adams
"Hugging trees has a calming effect on me. I'm talking about enormous
trees that will be there when we are all dead and gone. I've hugged
trees in every part of this little island."
- Gerry Adams
"A drunkard is a dead man, and all dead men are drunk."
- Yeats
"Every action of our lives touches on some chord that will vibrate in
eternity."
- Sean O'Casey
"Travelling - I was all my life at it. I'd still rather be travelling
around. I'm always thinking of it. It was a better and a nicer time
on the road - more freedom along the roads. We'd be selling tinware,
saucepans, cans - country people knew us well at those times and were
very nice."
- Former Irish Traveller (or "Tinker") Nan McDonagh
"Everywhere I go I'm asked if I think the university stifles writers.
My opinion is that they don't stifle enough of them. There's many a
best-seller that could have been prevented by a good teacher."
- Flannery O'Connor
"I spent 90% of my money on women and drink. The rest I wasted."
- Soccer superstar George Best
"It's easy to love humanity when you're this far away from it."
- Actor Daniel Day Lewis (who has lived in Ireland at various times),
quoted while looking down from the mountains of Luggala, County Wicklow
in The New York Times
"No person knows better than you do that the domination of England is
the sole and blighting curse of this country. It is the incubus that
sits on our energies, stops the pulsation of the nation’s heart and
leaves to Ireland not gay vitality but horrid the convulsions of a troubled
dream."- Daniel O'Connell (1775-1847), in an 1831 letter to Bishop Doyle.
"We have always found the Irish a bit odd. They refuse to be English."
- Winston Churchill
"He was a one-off, a unique figure of medieval power, intrigue and complexity,
surrounded by mystery and money, and protected by populism and cleverness
and the well-timed one-liner."
- Maire Goeghegan-Quinn, former Irish cabinet member, speaking of three-time
Irish Prime Minister Charles Haughey, who died June 13, 2006
"You know, I have a theory about Charlie Haughey. If you give him enough
rope, he'll hang you."
- BBC Ireland reporter Leo Enright.
"He is the best, the most skillful, the most devious and the most cunning."
- Charles Haughey's description of his successor as Prime Minister,
Bertie Ahern.
"My favorite optimist was an American who jumped off the Empire State
Building, and as he passed the 42nd floor, the window washers heard
him say, 'So Far, so good.'"
- John McGahern, Leitrim author who wrote "The Barracks" and five other
novels
"All the world's a stage and most of us are desperately unrehearsed."
- Sean O'Casey
"Could he not find in his heart the generosity to acknowledge that there
is a small nation that stood alone not for one year or two, but for
several hundred years against aggression; that endured spoliations,
famines, massacres in endless succession; that was clubbed many times
into insensibility, but that each time on returning [to] consciousness
took up the fight anew; a small nation that could never be got to accept
defeat and has never surrendered her soul?”
- Eamon De Valera, on Victory Day in Europe, May 8, 1945, responding
in a radio speech to criticism by Winston Churchill of Ireland’s neutrality
in World War II, a speech in which De Valera also thanked Churchill
for not invading Ireland.
"It was a bold man who ate the first oyster."
- Jonathan Swift
"Though I soon became typecast in Hollywood as a gangster and hoodlum,
I was originally a dancer, an Irish hoofer, trained in vaudeville tap
dance. I always leapt at the opportunity to dance in films later on."
- James Cagney
"If you could drink dreams like the Irish streams
Then the world would be high as the mountain of morn
In the Pool they told us the story
How the English divided the land..."
- John Lennon, "The Luck of the Irish" (song)
"In some of these institutions the buildings were designedly rendered
gloomy by the windows being obscured, so that the inmates were severed
from the outside world almost as effectively as if they were in prison."
- From a report on Ireland's Magdalen Asylums published in 1907 by a
humanitarian group from London
"Well, it takes all kinds of men to build a railroad."
"No sir, just us Irish."
- Railroad barons in "Dodge City," Warner Bros., 1939
"I saw a fleet of fishing boats...I flew down almost touching the craft
and yelled at them, asking if I was on the right road to Ireland. They
just stared. Maybe they didn't hear me. Maybe I didn't hear them. Or
maybe they thought I was just a crazy fool."
- Charles Lindbergh
"A doctor's reputation is made by the number of eminent men who die
under his care."
- George Bernard Shaw
"Neither Christ nor Buddha nor Socrates wrote a book, for to do so is
to exchange life for a logical process."
- William Butler Yeats
"Beware of the man whose God is in the skies."
- George Bernard Shaw
"I am a drinker with a writing problem."
- Brendan Behan
"I only drink on two occasions - When I am thirsty and when I'm not
thirsty."
- Brendan Behan
"Everywhere I go I'm asked if I think the university stifles writers.
My opinion is that they don't stifle enough of them."
- Flannery O'Connor
"Ireland, sir, for good or evil, is like no other place under heaven,
and no man can touch its sod or breathe its air without becoming better
or worse."
- George Bernard Shaw
Southwest Ireland"You know it's summer in Ireland when the rain gets
warmer."
- Hal Roach
"Aim at heaven and you will get earth thrown in. Aim at earth and you
get neither."
- C. S. Lewis
"There is, for whatever reason, an international tendency to be well-disposed
towards Ireland - a tendency that elevates us beyond our actual standing
on the world stage."
- Ivana Bacik, Irish barrister and Labour Party candidate
"As I walked back to the car, I chatted with an Englishman, who confirmed
that, indeed, sheep are dropping into the oceans around Ireland at a
regular rate"
- Margeret Lynn McLean, noting the general lack of fences along cliff
edges on Irish farms, "Insights on Ireland"
"Anyone under 35 feels like they are going through a meat grinder...It's
almost as if the economy is eating its young."
- Eddie Hobbs, host of the popular Irish TV show "Rip-Off Republic"
"This is one race of people for whom psychoanalysis is of no use whatsoever."
- Sigmund Freud (speaking about the Irish)
"He comes from a brainy Cork Family."
- First line of a British police dossier on Michael Collins, discovered
by Collins himself during a raid on Dublin Castle
"For the good are always the merry,
Save for an evil chance,
And the merry love the fiddle,
And the merry love to dance"
- W.B. Yeats, "The Fiddler of Dooney"
"I used to go missing quite alot...Miss Canada, Miss United Kingdom,
Miss World."
- George Best
"This day is a happy one for America. In some places Americans get a
little too happy."
- President George Bush, greeting Bertie Ahern at the White House on
St. Patrick's Day 2004
"Every absurdity has a champion to defend it."
- Oliver Goldsmith
"In Manhasset you were either Yankees or Mets, rich or poor, sober or
drunk...You were 'Gaelic' or 'garlic," as one schoolmate told me, and
I couldn't admit, to him or myself, that I had both Irish and Italian
ancestors."
- J. R. Moehringer, "The Tender Bar"
"Today I come back to you as a descendant of people who were buried
here in pauper's graves."
- President Ronald Reagan, on a visit to Ballyporeen in 1984
"The Irish gave the bagpipes to the Scotts as a joke, but the Scotts
haven't seen the joke yet."
- Oliver Herford
"Even if the ball was wrapped in bacon, Lassie couldn't find it."
- Heard from an Irish caddie, after a particularly bad shot.
"Those who drink to forget, please pay in advance."
- Sign at the Hibernian Bar, Cork City.
"He was the chaplain's clerk, a slender Irishman with prematurely gray
hair, melancholy eyes. His voice was the glory of the prison's choir."
- Truman Capote, "In Cold Blood."
"The worst threat to Irish farmers is not foot and mouth disease, but
a postal strike."
- Popular saying in rural Ireland, referring to Irish farmers' heavy
dependence on government subsidy checks to survive.
"As a writer, I write to see. If I knew how it would end, I wouldn't
write. It's a process of discovery."
- Author John McGahern
"The most important thing to remember about drunks is that drunks are
far more intelligent than non-drunks. They spend a lot of time talking
in pubs, unlike workaholics who concentrate on their careers and ambitions,
who never develop their higher spiritual values, who never explore the
insides of their head like a drunk does."
- Shane MacGowen, lead singer/songwriter for The Pogues.
"I started with rock n' roll and...then you start to take it apart like
a child with a toy and you see there's blues and there's country...Then
you go back from country into American music...and you end up in Scotland
and Ireland eventually."
- Elvis Costello
"The great Gaels of Ireland are the men that God made mad. For all their
wars are merry, and all their songs are sad."
- G.K. Chesterton
"Not a shred of evidence exists in favor of the idea that life is serious."
- Brendan Gill
"I tell you this - early this morning I signed my death warrant."
- Michael Collins, after signing a treaty on December 6, 1921 with England
creating the Irish Free State as a dominion within the British Commonwealth.
He was later assassinated by partisans unhappy with the deal.
"A wise man should have money in his head, but not in his heart."
- Jonathan Swift
"I was raised in an Irish-American home in Detroit where assimilation
was the uppermost priority. The price of assimilation and respectability
was amnesia. Although my great-grandparents were victims of the Great
Hunger of the 1840's, even though I was named Thomas Emmet Hayden IV
after the radical Irish nationalist exile Thomas Emmet, my inheritance
was to be disinherited. My parents knew nothing of this past, or nothing
worth passing on."
- Tom Hayden
"If (my grandfather) hadn't left, I'd be working over here at the Albatross
Company."
- JFK, during a 1963 visit to Ireland.
"Ireland, thou friend of my country in my country's most friendless
days, much injured, much enduring land, accept this poor tribute from
one who esteems thy worth, and mourns thy desolation."
- George Washington, speaking of Ireland's support for America during
the revolution.
"When anyone asks me about the Irish character, I say look at the trees.
Maimed, stark and misshapen, but ferociously tenacious."
- Edna O'Brien
"A man who is not afraid of the sea will soon be drowned...for he will
go out on a day he shouldn't. But we do be afraid of the sea, and we
only be drownded now and again."
- John Millington Synge, in his book "The Aran Islands," 1907
"Failures are finger posts on the road to achievement."
- C. S. Lewis
"I'll tell you what you can expect from an Irishman named Wellington
whose father was a bookmaker. You can expect that anything he says or
writes may be repeated aloud in your own home in front of your children.
You can believe he was taught to love and respect all mankind, but to
fear no man."
- The late Wellington Mara, owner of the New York Giants, in reponse
to a critical story by a sportswriter.
"As an intending Trappist, he would have to turn his back on pleasure
but that would not be so easy because he knew of practically nothing
which could be called pleasure."
- Flan O'Brien, "The Dalkey Archive"
"It is a curious contradiction, not very often remembered in England,
that for many generations the private soldiers of the British Army were
largely Irish."
- Cecil Woodham-Smith
"The point of poetry is to be acutely discomforting, to prod and provoke,
to poke us in the eye, to punch us in the nose, to knock us off our
feet, to take our breath away."
- Northern Irish poet Paul Muldoon
"I have never seen a West Cork farmer with an umbrella, except at a
funeral. His father or grandfather, who went to the creamery with an
ass and cart, insulated himself against the vagaries of the heavens
with a thick woolen overcoat and slightly greasy flat cap. Little rain
permeated the oxter or the headgear. Beneath the outer layer, which
could weigh a hundredweight when well soaked, the man remained dry and
warm."
- Damien Engright, "A Place Near Heaven - A Year in West Cork"
"There is no language like the Irish for soothing and quieting."
- John Millington Synge
"It's not that the Irish are cynical. It's simply that they have a wonderful
lack of respect for everything and everybody."
- Brendan Behan
"How would you know a Cork footballer? He's the one who thinks that
oral sex is just talking about it."
- Author John B. Keane
"The isles of Aran are fameous for the numerous multitude of Saints
there living of old and interred..."
- Roderick O'Flaherty, 1684
"When I told the people of Northern Ireland that I was an atheist, a
woman in the audience stood up and said, 'Yes, but is it the God of
the Catholics or the God of the Protestants in whom you don't believe?"
- Quentin Crisp
“Take care to get what you like or you will be forced to like what you
get.”
- George Bernard Shaw
"There can be no tradition without innovation."
- Earle Hitchner, Irish music journalist
"What was it that made Maggie leave Ireland, forsake her siblings and
parents and flee to New York in the 1800s, we never knew. We yearned
to know, because she was the first in a long line of leavers, the matriarch
of a clan of men and women who made mysterious and dramatic exits. But
her reason for leaving must have been too awful, too painful, because
Maggie was said to be a born storyteller, and that story was the one
she would never tell."
- J.R. Moehringer, "The Tender Bar"
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