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Quotes

I never yet could make out why men are so fond of hunting; they often hurt themselves, often spoil good horses, and tear up the fields—and all for a hare or a fox or a stag that they could get more easily some other way.

—Anna Sewell, 1877

No human being is innocent, but there is a class of innocent human actions called games.

—W.H. Auden, 1962

A passion for horses, players, and gladiators seems to be the epidemic folly of the times. The child receives it in his mother’s womb; he brings it with him into the world, and in a mind so possessed, what room for science, or any generous purpose?

—Tacitus, c. 100

I do love cricket—it’s so very English.

—Sarah Bernhardt, c. 1908

Sport is the bloom and glow of a perfect health.

—Ralph Waldo Emerson, 1838

A brilliant boxing match, quicksilver in its motions, transpiring far more rapidly than the mind can absorb, can have the power that Emily Dickinson attributed to great poetry: you know it’s great when it takes the top of your head off.

—Joyce Carol Oates, 1987

Football causeth fighting, brawling, contention, quarrel picking, murder, homicide and great effusion of bloode, as daily experience teacheth.

—Philip Stubbes, 1583

The fascination of shooting as a sport depends almost wholly on whether you are at the right or wrong end of a gun.

—P.G. Wodehouse, 1929

Hunting is all that’s worth living for—all time is lost what is not spent in hunting—it is like the air we breathe—if we have it not we die—it’s the sport of kings, the image of war without its guilt.

—Robert Smith Surtees, 1843

Idolatry is the mother of all games.

—Novatian, c. 255

If I played in New York, they’d name a candy bar after me.

—Reggie Jackson, 1976

Two things only the people anxiously desire, bread and the circus games.

—Juvenal, c. 121

The whole secret of fencing consists but in two things, to give and not to receive.

—Molière, 1670