English Authors 11/21/23 English Authors 11/21/23 Morrissey: 'I think I'd be a prime candidate for canonisation.' Read More English Authors 11/21/23 English Authors 11/21/23 Morrissey: 'I don't want to go on much longer, really. I think that would suggest a lack of imagination. A certain lack of dignity also.' Read More English Authors 11/21/23 English Authors 11/21/23 Morrissey: 'I began to go to concerts when I was 12 years old.' Read More English Authors 11/21/23 English Authors 11/21/23 Morrissey: 'Those Catholics, they really nab you when you're young.' Read More English Authors 11/21/23 English Authors 11/21/23 Morrissey: 'I don't know what I am.' Read More English Authors 11/21/23 English Authors 11/21/23 Morrissey: 'For me to think in terms of employing security seems ostentatious.' Read More English Authors 11/21/23 English Authors 11/21/23 Morrissey: 'The most common phrase bandied about these days is 'Oh my God'. People say it automatically all the time - not realising that that's a form of prayer.' Read More English Authors 11/21/23 English Authors 11/21/23 Morrissey: 'Let lying dogs sleep is something I always say in reference to the Smiths.' Read More English Authors 11/21/23 English Authors 11/21/23 Morrissey: 'I think there are unseen powers who don't want pop music to be anything other than glorified Madonnas.' Read More English Authors 11/21/23 English Authors 11/21/23 Morrissey: 'I'm capable of looking on the bright side. I just don't do it very often.' Read More English Authors 11/21/23 English Authors 11/21/23 Morrissey: 'I hated the royal wedding.' Read More English Authors 11/21/23 English Authors 11/21/23 Morrissey: 'I swim when I can but I don't work out.' Read More English Authors 11/21/23 English Authors 11/21/23 Morrissey: 'I know L.A. well, but it's a police state.' Read More English Authors 11/21/23 English Authors 11/21/23 Morrissey: 'Women don't go to war to kill other women. Wars and armies and nuclear weapons are essentially heterosexual hobbies.' Read More English Authors 11/21/23 English Authors 11/21/23 Morrissey: 'The Smiths was an incredibly personal thing to me. It was like launching your own diary to music.' Read More English Authors 11/21/23 English Authors 11/21/23 Morrissey: 'Although I don't have anything against people from other countries, the higher the influx into England the more the British identity disappears.' Read More English Authors 11/21/23 English Authors 11/21/23 Sabine Baring-Gould: 'The universal practice of closing the eyes of the dead may be thought to have originated in the desire that he might be prevented from seeing his way.' Read More English Authors 11/21/23 English Authors 11/21/23 Sabine Baring-Gould: 'Black was not the universal hue of mourning in Europe. In Castile, white obtained on the death of its princes.' Read More English Authors 11/21/23 English Authors 11/21/23 Sabine Baring-Gould: 'When the British became Christian, Christianity in no way altered their political organisation.' Read More English Authors 11/21/23 English Authors 11/21/23 Sabine Baring-Gould: 'According to Celtic law, all sons equally divided the inheritance and principalities of their father.' Read More Newer Posts Older Posts
English Authors 11/21/23 English Authors 11/21/23 Morrissey: 'I think I'd be a prime candidate for canonisation.' Read More
English Authors 11/21/23 English Authors 11/21/23 Morrissey: 'I don't want to go on much longer, really. I think that would suggest a lack of imagination. A certain lack of dignity also.' Read More
English Authors 11/21/23 English Authors 11/21/23 Morrissey: 'I began to go to concerts when I was 12 years old.' Read More
English Authors 11/21/23 English Authors 11/21/23 Morrissey: 'Those Catholics, they really nab you when you're young.' Read More
English Authors 11/21/23 English Authors 11/21/23 Morrissey: 'For me to think in terms of employing security seems ostentatious.' Read More
English Authors 11/21/23 English Authors 11/21/23 Morrissey: 'The most common phrase bandied about these days is 'Oh my God'. People say it automatically all the time - not realising that that's a form of prayer.' Read More
English Authors 11/21/23 English Authors 11/21/23 Morrissey: 'Let lying dogs sleep is something I always say in reference to the Smiths.' Read More
English Authors 11/21/23 English Authors 11/21/23 Morrissey: 'I think there are unseen powers who don't want pop music to be anything other than glorified Madonnas.' Read More
English Authors 11/21/23 English Authors 11/21/23 Morrissey: 'I'm capable of looking on the bright side. I just don't do it very often.' Read More
English Authors 11/21/23 English Authors 11/21/23 Morrissey: 'I swim when I can but I don't work out.' Read More
English Authors 11/21/23 English Authors 11/21/23 Morrissey: 'I know L.A. well, but it's a police state.' Read More
English Authors 11/21/23 English Authors 11/21/23 Morrissey: 'Women don't go to war to kill other women. Wars and armies and nuclear weapons are essentially heterosexual hobbies.' Read More
English Authors 11/21/23 English Authors 11/21/23 Morrissey: 'The Smiths was an incredibly personal thing to me. It was like launching your own diary to music.' Read More
English Authors 11/21/23 English Authors 11/21/23 Morrissey: 'Although I don't have anything against people from other countries, the higher the influx into England the more the British identity disappears.' Read More
English Authors 11/21/23 English Authors 11/21/23 Sabine Baring-Gould: 'The universal practice of closing the eyes of the dead may be thought to have originated in the desire that he might be prevented from seeing his way.' Read More
English Authors 11/21/23 English Authors 11/21/23 Sabine Baring-Gould: 'Black was not the universal hue of mourning in Europe. In Castile, white obtained on the death of its princes.' Read More
English Authors 11/21/23 English Authors 11/21/23 Sabine Baring-Gould: 'When the British became Christian, Christianity in no way altered their political organisation.' Read More
English Authors 11/21/23 English Authors 11/21/23 Sabine Baring-Gould: 'According to Celtic law, all sons equally divided the inheritance and principalities of their father.' Read More