Top 150 Quotes & Sayings by Malcolm Muggeridge - Page 3

Explore popular quotes and sayings by a British journalist Malcolm Muggeridge.
Last updated on December 23, 2024.
I'm much too modest a person.
I accept the fact I am an unregenerate egghead.
It's the circumstances of popular monarchy, the manner in which it's developed, and it is also the fault of the people who present her with this unquestioning adulation. In other words, it's their lack of a larger faith. Which makes them fasten onto, a purely earthly symbol.
The great advantage of the sort of education I had was precisely that it made practically no mark upon those subjected to it. — © Malcolm Muggeridge
The great advantage of the sort of education I had was precisely that it made practically no mark upon those subjected to it.
The skyscrapers began to rise again, frailly massive, elegantly utilitarian, images in their grace, audacity and inconclusiveness, of the whole character of the people who produces them.
Sex on the brain is the wrong place to have it.
Sex is the mysticism of materialism.
The Sputnik is just to me like a firework, a rocket, a new invention.
I wouldn't have said that Anthony Eden was equipped by nature to deal with the situation in the world today. I would have said that he was portentous, sincere, honest and rather stupid.
Secrecy is as essential to intelligence as vestments and incense to a Mass or darkness to a spiritualist séance and must at all times be maintained, quite irrespective of whether or not it serves any purpose.
I think it [presidency of Dwight Eisenhower] came too late and I think that he is not on the wavelength of this dreadful time through which we're living.
The truth is that a lost empire, lost power and lost wealth provide perfect circumstances for living happily and contentedly in our enchanted island.
I think Winston Churchill is an appallingly bad politician, and always has been, that he hung onto power long after he should have done, and that his post-war administration was a disaster.
I think that any person who is commenting on public affairs is entitled to point out those dangers.
I think that Sir Winston Churchill, in the period that the Germans occupied the Channel Ports, when the whole war hung in issue, fulfilled a role, which is as great as any role in our history.
An orgy looks particularly alluring seen through the mists of righteous indignation.
Humor is practically the only thing about which the English are utterly serious.
A decrepit society shuns humor as a decrepit individual shuns drafts.
I think that President [Dwight] Eisenhower was... did the most marvelous job in the war, not really a military job: a public relations job, and it was essential that there should be a public relations job done in the post that he had.
I don't think that it would make the slightest difference to life and to the aspects of life that interest me if we could go to the moon tomorrow, because I think what really makes life interesting is the big question "Why?"
I don't like seeing people angry.
The English have this extraordianry respect for longevity. The best example of this was Queen Victoria, a most unpleasant woman who achieved a sort of public affection simply by living to be an enormous age.
I simply make this point, that the monarchy in so far, as it is identified with what is, in my opinion, an obsolete class structure, is making a mistake, and the task of those who are responsible for the conduct of the monarchical institution is to detach it from that class structure.
I think Queen Elisabeth II is a charming woman. — © Malcolm Muggeridge
I think Queen Elisabeth II is a charming woman.
I have a very great respect for Americans, and having been a correspondent in this country, and I believe that Americans are people who respond much better to facts and truthful, genuine speculation, than they do to purely, kind of phoney, adulation.
I think that Harold MacMillan is a very intelligent man, who, as so often happens in politics, achieved supreme power too late.
It's a sad thing about politics that most people get power too late, in that they differ from ladies of easy virtue who get their pleasures too early.
Civilization - a heap of rubble scavenged by scrawny English Lit. vultures.
The monarchical institution in England is immensely valuable.
I have to say that I think that Anthony Eden was probably the most disastrous Prime Minister in our history, and I am not forgetting Lord North and a few people like that.
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