Discover the most popular and inspiring quotes and sayings on the topic of Hampshire. 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 Hampshire Quotes And Sayings by 96 Authors including Charles Churchill,Miranda Raison,Jennifer L. Armentrout,Jan Brett,Anthony Head for you to enjoy and share.
England, a happy land we know,
Where follies naturally grow,
Where without culture they arise,
And tow'r above the common size.
My mum lives near Holkham Bay in Norfolk, and with my dad by the coast in Suffolk, I spend quite a bit of time by the sea.
Charleston, West "by gods" Virginia
I've found places that are just as beautiful as New England, but this is my home.
Somerset has a wonderful wildness about it - it hasn't been tamed. This is farming country, and there's a realness here - I love it.
Derby born and bred, mate.
I come from south Wales. A place called Aberbargoed.
New England has a harsh climate, a barren soil, a rough and stormy coast, and yet we love it, even with a love passing that of dwellers in more favored regions.
The Norfolk landscape sends a shiver through my soul ...
Although I'm living in California, I'm very proud to be British.
There are lots of beautiful areas in England, and I am lucky enough to live in a stunning part of a very beautiful area.
I grew up in Fall River, Massachusetts. My background was modest, and I worked at a Portuguese bakery in town.
The restoration comes not only from the landscape and air, though they play their significant part, but from the people. I feel a strong need to be in New Hampshire for as much of the summer as I can manage it.
The countryside they
I grew up outside of Boston in a town called Manchester by the Sea, and we spent our summers in Nantucket.
Cornwall, peopled mainly by Celts, but with an infusion of English blood, stands and always has stood apart from the rest of England, much, but in a less degree, as has Wales.
The town of GUILDFORD, which (taken with its environs) I, who have seen so many, many towns, think the prettiest, and, taken all together, the most agreeable and most happy-looking, that I ever saw in my life.
I was thinking of Cambridge, and then I got a bit homesick for a minute, 'cause I never been this far away from home before. But the I remember you're here, and now I'm not homesick no more.
The nearest inhabited village is about seven of your English miles to the left.
I'm from Maine. I eat apple pie for breakfast.
Manchester, one of the greatest, if not really the greatest mere village in England.
Aberdeen, a city in the northern reaches of HSBC-London. Their
I have a cottage near Aldeburgh, and from there it's a sturdy two-mile walk across farmland to an empty beach, where I collect hag stones and run around with the dog. I'm a keen walker, and I love Suffolk's big skies.
There's such an odd, eclectic group of people that make up the town of Plymouth, New Hampshire. I don't think I could avoid not coming out of there with a pretty good sense of humor.
Oklahoma
Where the wind comes sweepin' down the plain.
Bergen, and Oldfield. The
Wales! Where the men are men and the sheep are scared!
Cambridge is thriving and Britain is working. We have been telling people - 'if you value it, vote for it' - and this is particularly relevant in Cambridge.
London, dirty little pool of life
Oh yeah, I'm an Essex boy and proud of it.
My father was in the coal business in West Virginia. Both dad and mother were, however, originally from Massachusetts; New England, to them, meant the place to go if you really wanted an education.
At home, I hardly ever leave London. I don't like the countryside in England.
I have lived in Norfolk all my life. It inspires me, the sea, the limitless skies, the mud and the burning sunsets and the freedom of a place where more than 50% of the neighbours are fish.
Sussex, hailed back to Oxfordshire by Rutland's
I came from Mechanicsville, Virginia, where you have four seasons.
I never fully realized how much a New England birth in itself was worth, but I am happy that that was my lot. I have felt it so keenly these last few days. Dear old New England, with all her sternness and uncompromising opinions; the home of all that is good and noble.
I don't know why I stayed in this big lost corner of New Hampshire. Probably because I can blow bubble pipe bubbles at absolute zero and nobody up here pays me any mind.
I was born in Northampton, in Burlington County, West Jersey, in the year 1720.
I was born in Massachusetts and lived there until I was thirteen years old.
My life is really so much based in England.
I went to high school in the highlands of Scotland.
I'm from Canada and my wife is from St. Albans, so I feel a great kinship with the Brits.
A postcard and I'm pining for New England. . .
My parents were born in Norfolk and spent their early years working in the big houses of that rural English county, my mother as a cook and my father as a handyman and chauffeur.
There is a forgotten, nay almost forbidden word, which means more to me than any other. That word is England.
There is no pleasing New Englanders, my dear, their soil is all rocks and their hearts are bloodless absolutes.
Years ago I had a house in Sussex, it was like Arcadia, with an old Victorian bridge, a pond and the Downs.
My parents are from Manchester but I was brought up in London, Camden Town.
People in New Hampshire know that I'll talk thoughtfully, substantively about any issue.
England? England is in London right?
Scotland: That garret of the earth - that knuckle-end of England - that land of Calvin, oatcakes, and sulfur.
England ... the greatest and the most glorious and beautiful land on earth.
In Massachusetts and Vermont, there had been plenty of mosquitoes, but in New Hampshire, they had reinforcements.
At age 10 or 12 he's going to boarding school in the Isle of Wight. The Isle of Wight is, of course, down at the bottom of England just off South Hampton.
When she spoke even now, after forty years, among the slurred consonants and the flat vowels of the land where her life had been cast, New England talked as plainly as it did in the speech of her kin who had never left New Hampshire
I grew up in a town called Hopedale, Massachusetts. I was born there in 1964, and the only thing I hate outside of myself is everything else.
A country of long shadows on county cricket grounds, warm beer, green suburbs, dog lovers, and old maids cycling to holy communion through the morning mist.
Cornwall has lots of folk and Celtic music and has that kind of surfer vibe as well. That was my kind of upbringing.
New Brunswick. Shediac. Lobster Capital of the World.
I went to high school in Lexington, Massachusetts, which in hindsight was very nice.
There are bitter weeds in England.
Nothing moves at the Hotel New Hampshire! We're screwed down here-for life!
California, the department store state.
I love England, especially the food. There's nothing I like more than a lovely bowl of pasta.
I lived in Camden, Primrose Hill and Kentish Town for 10 years.
I was born in Bradford, a city in the north of England that God forgot about. A place where most people never leave, but if they do, they certainly never go back.
I'm a hard-mouthed northeastern lad. That's me - the Eminem of Northeast England.
Goodnight you princes of Maine, you kings of New England.
I like it in Manchester. I thought it was going to be much colder, but it is not too bad. And my wife and son are happy here, too.
London, ... like a bowl of viscid human fluid, boils sullenly over the rim of its encircling hills and slops messily into the home counties.
UK - that was Britain.
Very nice sort of place, Oxford, I should think, for people that like that sort of place.
Connecticut, a State which supplies the Union with pioneers for the mind as well as for the forest,
This souls'prison we call England.
The stately Homes of England,How beautiful they stand!Amidst their tall ancestral trees,O'er all the pleasant land.
California: The west coast of Iowa.
What an awful place to live in England is, ... If it isn't snowing or raining or blowing it's misty. And if the sun does shine it's so cold that you can't feel your fingers or toes.
State and home country, there's a difference
It's a place I'll always remember, and I have nothing bad to say about New England. I love that place.
They had eaten at a place called Terry's for lunch, Terry's Primo Subs in Hampton, which was back in New Hampshire, on the sea.
Norfolk specializes in odd pronunciations. Hautbois is hobbiss, Wymondham is windum, Costessey is cozzy, Postwick is pozzik. People often ask why that is. I'm not sure, but I think it is just something that happens when you sleep with close relatives.
Lette me stande to the maine chance.
I live here in Vermont, in a village of barely a thousand people halfway up the state's third highest mountain.
Another Country,
Maine is a joy in the summer. But the soul of Maine is more apparent in the winter.
New England is quite as large a lump of earth as my heart can really take in.
The Vermont mountains stretch extended straight; New Hampshire mountains curl up in a coil.
Slavery in New Hampshire was never legally abolished, unless Abraham Lincoln did it. The State itself has not ever pronounced any emancipation edict.
Fishing the small streams of New Hampshire is a pastime that combines hiking, map reading, and bushwhacking - plenty of it.
All the time we were there, you could see that dead squirrel right out in plain sight. Whenever anyone mentions New Hampshire, that squirrel is always what I think of. I bet I've thought about that squirrel a million times.
Britain, and my hometown, will always be with me wherever I go and whatever I do - but I prefer to live in California.
I'd love to live in Kent but it's all a question of work.
I was born in Taunton, Massachusetts on June 1, 1917, but I actually grew up in nearby New Bedford.
Cornwall is one of the most beautiful places, with great people - there's not a great downside to it.
I'm from Kingston, R.I., sort of on the University of Rhode Island campus - on the margins of that, actually.
I love England and the historical aspect of it.
Goldsboro, North Carolina.
England is the country where I learned my profession. They are the ones that trained me, they are the ones that believed in me.
I love England. I don't really like places when they're too hot. It's my Celtic blood.
I know there are lots of regional accents in England, but I can't tell them apart and I'm not really aware of class. I don't pay any attention to those boundaries. I'm a California girl.