A Quote by Kenneth Branagh

I live in the English countryside, so I'm surrounded by magpies. — © Kenneth Branagh
I live in the English countryside, so I'm surrounded by magpies.
I love the countryside, which is where I live and feel most comfortable, and hate being surrounded by herds of people.
What makes me really happy is a walk in the English countryside. A nice sunset, that British countryside - it means I'm home.
The English tradition offers the great tapestry novel, where you have the emotional aspect of a detective's personal life, the circumstances of the crime and, most important, the atmosphere of the English countryside that functions as another character.
Society in the English countryside is still strangely, quaintly divided. If black comedy and a certain type of social commentary are what you want, I think English rural communities offer quite a lot of material.
I like girls who like the countryside, put on walking boots and can bend with the wind a bit. If you're going to live with me, you need to be able to embrace the countryside and wet dogs.
I loved the [English] countryside. I went to John Bonham's grave.
I grew up in the English countryside, raising ducks and chickens.
The English countryside, its growth and its destruction, is a genuine and tragic theme.
I am from the countryside, very rural countryside, and I moved to Tokyo when I was 18 and have been living first-ever since. So yes, I am a city guy, but sometimes I sort of feel there's another me in a parallel world, still in the countryside.
Only in the English countryside could violent death remain something that is 'cosy.'
If I'm in the English countryside and get on my bicycle, I see what sort of strange inbred rural locals I can snap.
I live in Hamburg; that's in the north. And I live on the outskirts of town. It looks like countryside.
Where I live is about an hour and a half West of London. I live in the countryside... It's a classic little village, and it's idyllic in a lot of ways.
As a little girl living in the English countryside, I used to go running around in the forests, creating my own fairy tale.
I've grown up surrounded by Americans and to a very large extent feel American. It sounds strange because I seem to be so quintessentially English in everyone's mind - and perhaps I am. Perhaps it's quintessentially English to have a fascination with America.
Of course, the English countryside is completely artificial. It was naturally a forest; they chopped down the trees and made it into what it is now: really a beautiful country.
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