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The Oxford Dictionary of Quotations Preface

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3.25 David Ormsby Gore 1918-85<br />

See Lord Harlech (8.42) in Volume I<br />

3.26 Josè Ortega y Gasset 1883-1955<br />

Yo soy yo y mi circumstancia, y si no la salvo a ella no me salvo yo.<br />

I am I plus my surroundings and if I do not preserve the latter, I do not preserve myself.<br />

‘Meditaciones del Quijote’ (1914) in ‘Obras Completas’ (1946) vol. 1, p. 322<br />

La civilización no es otra cosa que el ensayo de reducir la fuerza a ultima ratio.<br />

Civilization is nothing more than the effort to reduce the use <strong>of</strong> force to the last resort.<br />

‘La Rebelión de las Masas’ (1930) in ‘Obras Completas’ (1947) vol. 4, p. 191<br />

3.27 Joe Orton 1933-67<br />

I’d the upbringing a nun would envy and that’s the truth. Until I was fifteen I was more<br />

familiar with Africa than my own body.<br />

‘Entertaining Mr Sloane’ (1964) act 1<br />

Kath: Can he be present at the birth <strong>of</strong> his child?...<br />

Ed: It’s all any reasonable child can expect if the dad is present at the conception.<br />

‘Entertaining Mr Sloane’ (1964) act 3<br />

Every luxury was lavished on you—atheism, breast-feeding, circumcision.<br />

‘Loot’ (1967) act 1<br />

Policemen, like red squirrels, must be protected.<br />

‘Loot’ (1967) act 1<br />

Reading isn’t an occupation we encourage among police <strong>of</strong>ficers. We try to keep the paper<br />

work down to a minimum.<br />

‘Loot’ (1967) act 2<br />

You were born with your legs apart. <strong>The</strong>y’ll send you to the grave in a Y-shaped c<strong>of</strong>fin.<br />

‘What the Butler Saw’ (1969) act 1<br />

3.28 George Orwell (Eric Blair) 1903-50<br />

Man is the only creature that consumes without producing.<br />

‘Animal Farm’ (1945) ch. 1<br />

Four legs good, two legs bad.<br />

‘Animal Farm’ (1945) ch. 3<br />

All animals are equal but some animals are more equal than others.<br />

‘Animal Farm’ (1945) ch. 10<br />

Attlee reminds me <strong>of</strong> nothing so much as a recently dead fish, before it has had time to stiffen.<br />

Diary, 19 May 1942, in Sonia Orwell and Ian Angus (eds.) ‘<strong>The</strong> Collected Essays, Journalism and Letters <strong>of</strong><br />

George Orwell’ (1968) vol. 2, p. 426<br />

At 50, everyone has the face he deserves.<br />

Last words in his notebook, 17 April 1949, in Sonia Orwell and Ian Angus (eds.) ‘<strong>The</strong> Collected Essays,

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