Discover the most popular and inspiring quotes and sayings on the topic of Chesterfield. Share them with your friends on social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter, or your personal blogs, and let the world be inspired by their powerful messages. Here are the Top 100 Chesterfield Quotes And Sayings by 92 Authors including A.j.p. Taylor,William Shakespeare,George Bernard Shaw,Jane Austen,P.g. Wodehouse for you to enjoy and share.
Manchester has everything but good looks ... , the only place in England which escapes our characteristic vice of snobbery.
Northumberland, thou ladder wherewithal the mounting Bolingbroke ascends my throne.
Very nice sort of place, Oxford, I should think, for people that like that sort of place.
here you are in Bath, andBath-- Jane Austen
You must meet old Rowbotham, Bertie. A delightful chap. Wants to massacre the bourgeoisie, sack Park Lane and disembowel the hereditary aristocracy. Well, nothing could be fairer than that, what?
On the Jellicoe road
Oh yeah, I'm an Essex boy and proud of it.
Maidstone," he says, "in Kent. But I moved
We'd learned in school that the city of London, England, is the largest city in the whole wide world. Maybe so. But it couldn't have been much bigger than Rutland.
Manchester has a certain reputation of being cool.
against Cameron's
Few areas which are not publicly owned can boast as many footpaths as the Cuckmere Valley. For a short walk, a footbridge across the river leads back to the little hamlet of Milton Street, where another classic local pub, the Sussex Ox, provides an admirable lunch.
Nowhere beats the heart so kindly as beneath the tartan plaid!
London, dirty little pool of life
I spent a lot of the holidays at Charlie's home in Herefordshire, learning to drive on his
Charleston, West "by gods" Virginia
I grew up in North Yorkshire, but now London is home.
I just love watching football. It doesn't matter what level it is, whether it's Fleetwood or Blackpool. I love to go and watch games.
I grew up in Yorkshire, and once or twice a year, we'd travel over the Pennines to see my cousins in Cheshire.
This is Manchester, we do things differently here
Let any stranger find mee so pleasant a county, such good way, large heath, three such places as Norwich, Yar. and Lin. in any county of England, and I'll bee once again a vagabond to visit them.
Let me just say, I've seen a pub or two.Pub-- Don Johnson
I like English parks.
We may not be in Manchester but we will always be united
I took a train to Liverpool. they were having a festival when I arrived. Citizens had taken time off from their busy activities to add crisp packets, empty cigarette boxes and carrier-bags to the other wise bland and neglected landscape.
If I should be so blessed as to revisit again my own country, but more especially Manchester, all that I could hope or desire would be presented before in one view.
Tottenham Court Road, and he left a tidy business
In my time at Anfield we always said we had the best two teams on Merseyside - Liverpool and Liverpool reserves.
Better than sweet tea on a veranda. I want to live at Belmont!
This city has two great teams - Liverpool and Liverpool reserves.
Sarcasm is a Manchester trait.
My baby will be growing up in Liverpool, so we have another Scouser.
Cresington Lane, There's an old public toilet with an old broken
I like a Blackpool breakfast, me - 20 ciggies and a pot of tea.
I'm world-famous in West Bromwich.
I grew up in Doncaster and have felt the love for football run through the town; it's for that reason that I have a real personal passion to make Doncaster Rovers a success story.
Have you by chance brought some real British tea? Twining's? Or from Jackson's in Piccadilly?
Whatever your tastes, Magrathea can cater for you. We are not proud.
The South Downs of England reminded me a bit of my Old Virginia homeland.
I grew up in Birmingham, where they made useful things and made them well.
In that pleasant district of merry England which is watered by the river Don, there extended in ancient times a large forest, covering the greater part of the beautiful hills and valleys which lie between Sheffield and the pleasant town of Doncaster.
It never rains in Manchester, but it pours
side of Vicki's, with Alfred on the other,
I'm not actually posh; I'm really rough and from the wrong side of the tracks. I grew up in Putney, which is pretty rough.
I'm a full grown man and I'm not tall enough to ride a rollercoaster. So I will sit on the teacups, eat my tea and biscuits and reminisce with the cheshire cat who lives in my head. Oh hello Mr. Cheshire, lovely weather this morning. Mr. Cheshire? Oh my god.
I am, and always will be, proud to be a Hackney girl.
Lord Chesterfield designated ugly women as the third sex; how shall we place ugly men.
Middlesbrough is the second greatest place to live in Britain! Behind Hartlepool.
And Tomlinson found this in the Times right before I left to come here. Windham
At the beginning of my acting career, I worked for two seasons at the RSC and spent a lot of time in the Cotswolds exploring Shakespeare's countryside. It's my kind of English landscape, with its tiny villages and one-room thatched pubs.
I grew up Windlesham in Surrey, which is a beautiful and quaint village.
I divide my time between all the mud and open space in Surrey and the social life and work in London, particularly Chelsea, which still has the same village feel that it had in the swinging Sixties.
Thomasville, North Carolina. A
No more coals to Newcastle, no more Hoares to Paris.
(Oxford: Clarendon
Brighton I-don't-know-your-middle-name Waterford, are you asking me to strip?
Tommy, why did they put Maldon Surrey on the telegram?"
"Because Maldon is in Surrey, idiot.
I love the Old Vic so deeply, it's like a second home.
It is a Lancashire custom to be on the defensive. We anticipate jokes about rain, "bi gum," and Wigan; we expect people to peer at us through the thin layer of smoke they fancy they see around our heads.
I always look in the Sunday paper to see where Everton are in the league - starting, of course, from the bottom up.
London darkens the map like England's bowel polyp. There is a whole country up here.
our cabin in the woods in Clare.
London, that great cesspool into which all the loungers and idlers of the Empire are irresistibly drained.
CLEARVIEW, QUEENS
The Merseyside derby games are unique in the city.
In the end you'll have to cede to Lord Mersey. He's too much of a peer, you understand? And a bit of a prick as well.
Edinburgh House. He had heard that in its industrial heyday, Corby had had
London: A place you go to get bronchitis.
A flat black bug, that is London.
It is a long way off, sir"
"From what Jane?"
"From England and from Thornfield: and _"
"Well?"
"From you, sir
ah've been on t'dole all mi life in fucking Leeds!
I live in dungarees, and I love denim - I wear denim shirts a lot.
When I appeared in 'Coronation Street,' I lived in Manchester and enjoyed it very much.
I'm not posh! I'm just southern
SOUTH RICHMOND was a neighborhood of mouse holes, lace curtains, Sears catalogs, measles epidemics, baloney sandwiches - and men who knew more about the carburetor than they knew about the clitoris.
Of course I didn't take my wife to see Rochdale as an anniversary present. It was her birthday and would I have got married during the football season? Anyway, it was Rochdale reserves.
The fact that I'm on 'Essex Anthems' makes me happy, especially because half of my family's from Essex.
It matters, like this: I belong to Malvern, you don't.
paradise for people who look as if they have just stepped out of a Barbour catalogue.
Carney is like a graveyard where everyone already owns their plots and has built houses on top of them.
Surprisingly few outsiders know about the Cuckmere Valley, and it is not uncommon for people to confuse Alfriston with Alfreton in the Derbyshire Peak District.
Nigel Barton:Everyone says 'Up at Oxford'. You come 'down' when you've finished there.
Harry Barton: Well, what's this then? Does bloody Oxford move up and down the bloody map then?
the Isle of Wight, with occasional visits to
Lincolnshire is the Idaho of England. You were either going to drive a tractor for the rest of your life or head for the city to work in a factory.
I am not posh. I went to a comprehensive school.
I liked very much when we lived in Hampstead. We would go for walks on the Heath. I liked it better than living in the centre of town.
Essex is an amazing county, with its own set of rules. It's a completely different world.
In large Victorian houses with many rooms and heavy doors, the occupants could be mysterious and exciting to one another in a way that those who live in rackety developments can never hope to be. Not even the lust of a Lord Byron could survive the fact of Levittown.
Street towards Covent Garden. There was
Last time I was in London, I visited Number 5, Bruton Street, which is the address I gave to Violet Bridgerton, the matriarch of the Bridgerton clan in my novels. It was a bit disconcerting to learn that it's actually a pub.
The difference between Everton and the Queen Mary is that Everton carry more passengers!
Broad-streeted Richmond ... The trees in the streets are old trees used to living with people, Family trees that remember your grandfather's name.
My family and I live in a wing of a Georgian mansion in East Sussex, which was built in the 1780s and fell into disrepair. It was rescued in the Seventies and carved into six terrace houses.
Kingsport or feel at home there. Before
I was, by the way - I'm an Essex lad, born and raised in Essex in the U.K.
been used to look in Hertfordshire - paid his
Certainly Manchester is the most wonderful city of modem times.
Don't deny me what's mine, Brighton.
The Thames is a wretched river after the Mersey and the ships are not like Liverpool ships and the docks are barren of beauty ... it is a beastly hole after Liverpool; for Liverpool is the town of my heart and I would rather sail a mudflat there than command a clipper out of London
Mint-street and Kent-street--those old plague-spots that disgrace and disfigure the fair face of the Borough of Southwark--teem with blackguardism and vice; but here, too, you find that the birds who here flock are strictly of a feather. Cow-cross,