“The best thing I know between France and England is the sea.”
The Anglo-French Alliance, reported in Bartlett's Familiar Quotations, 10th ed. (1919).
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Douglas William Jerrold 16
English dramatist and writer 1803–1857Related quotes

On why she relocated to the United States in the late 1960s
Old Grey Whistle Test interview (1978)

Letter http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/USAsocialismP.htm to John Reed (22 October 1918)
Context: American capitalism is predatory, and American politics are corrupt: The same thing is true in England and the same in France; but in all these three countries the dominating fact is that whenever the people get ready to change the government, they can change it. The same thing is not true of Germany, and until it was made true in Germany, there could be no free political democracy anywhere else in the world — to say nothing of any free social democracy. My revolutionary friends who will not recognize this fact seem to me like a bunch of musicians sitting down to play a symphony concert in a forest where there is a man-eating tiger loose. For my part, much as I enjoy symphony concerts, I want to put my fiddle away in its case and get a rifle and go out and settle with the tiger.

Pt. II, Ch. 1 Early French Adventure in North America
Pioneers of France in the New World (1865)

Sol, vind och vatten är
Det bästa som jag vet
Men det är på dig jag
Tänker I hemlighet
Sol, vind och vatten
Höga berg och djupa hav
Det, är mina drömmar vävda av
"Sol, vind och vatten", lyrics written by Kenneth
Song lyrics, With Ted Gärdestad, Ted (1973)

Speech in Rochdale (26 June 1861), quoted in John Bright and J. E. Thorold Rogers (eds.), Speeches on Questions of Public Policy by Richard Cobden, M.P. Volume II (London: T. Fisher Unwin, 1908), pp. 433-4.
1860s

“This could have occurred nowhere but in England, where men and sea interpenetrate, so to speak.”
Youth, A Narrative http://www.gutenberg.org/files/525/525.txt (1902)