An Englishman’s Home

by

Evelyn Waugh

An Englishman’s Home Quotes

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Part 1 Quotes

For Metcalfe was but lately initiated into the cult of the countryside, and any features of it still claimed his devotion—its agricultural processes, its social structure, its vocabulary, its recreations; the aspect of it, glittering now under the cool May sunshine, fruit trees in flower, chestnut in full leaf, the ash budding; the sound and smell of it—Mr. Westmacott calling his cows at dawn, the scent of wet earth and Boggett splashing clumsily among the wall-flowers; the heart of it—or what Mr. Metcalfe took to be its heart—pulsing all round him; his own heart beating time, for was he not part of it, a true countryman, a landowner?

Related Characters: Mr. Metcalfe, Boggett , Mr. Westmacott
Related Symbols: Mr. Westmacott’s Cows, Gardens
Page Number: 218
Explanation and Analysis:

Lady Peabury lived at Much Malcock House, whose chimneys, soon to be hidden in the full foliage of summer, could still be seen among its budding limes on the opposite slope of the valley[…]. She was a widow and, like Mr. Metcalfe, had come to Much Malcock from abroad.

Related Characters: Mr. Metcalfe, Lady Peabury
Related Symbols: Gardens
Page Number: 220
Explanation and Analysis:

Colonel Hodge lived at the Manor […] whose gardens, too, backed on to Westmacott’s meadow. He was impecunious but active in the affairs of the British Legion and the Boy Scouts; he accepted Mr. Metcalfe’s invitation to dinner, but spoke of him, in his family circle, as “the cotton wallah.”

Related Characters: Mr. Metcalfe, Colonel Hodge
Page Number: 220
Explanation and Analysis:

[…] the Hornbeams at the Old Mill were a childless, middle-aged couple who devoted themselves to craftsmanship. Mr. Hornbeam senior was a genuine commercial potter in Staffordshire; he supported them reluctantly and rather exiguously, but this backing of unearned quarterly cheques placed them definitely in the upper strata of local society […]. Mr. Metcalfe thought Mr. Hornbeam Bohemian, and Mr. Hornbeam thought Mr. Metcalfe Philistine.

Related Characters: Mr. Metcalfe, The Hornbeams
Page Number: 220-221
Explanation and Analysis:

Foreign visitors impressed by the charges of London restaurants and the splendour of the more accessible ducal palaces often express wonder at the wealth of England. A half has not been told them. It is in remote hamlets like Much Malcock that the great reservoirs of national wealth seep back into the soil.

Page Number: 221
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 2 Quotes

Build. It was a word so hideous that no one in Much Malcock dared use it above a whisper. “Housing scheme,” “Development,” “Clearance,” “Council Houses,” “Planning”—these obscene words had been expunged from the polite vocabulary of the district, only to be used now and then, with the license allowed to anthropologists, of the fierce tribes beyond the parish boundary. And now the horror was in their midst, the mark of Plague in the court of the Decameron.

Related Characters: Mr. Metcalfe
Page Number: 224
Explanation and Analysis:

There was a sudden change. He was no longer the public-spirited countryman; he was cards-on-the-table-brass-tacks-and-twenty-shillings-in-the-pound-treat-him-fair-or-mind-your-step Metcalfe, Metcalfe with his back up, fighting Metcalfe once again, Metcalfe who would cut off his nose any day to spite his face, sink any ship for a ha’p’orth of tar that was not legally due, Metcalfe the lion of the Rotarians.

Page Number: 231
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 3 Quotes

He wants £500. It is excessive, but I am prepared to pay half of this if you will pay the other half. Should you not accede to this generous offer I shall take steps to safeguard my own interests at whatever cost to the neighbourhood

P.S. —I mean I shall sell the Hall and develop the property as building lots.

Related Characters: Mr. Metcalfe (speaker), Lady Peabury
Page Number: 233
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 4 Quotes

In the doomed field Mr. Westmacott, almost for the last time, was calling his cattle; next week building was to begin and they must seek other pastures. So, in a manner of speaking, must Mr. Metcalfe.

Related Characters: Mr. Metcalfe, Mr. Westmacott
Related Symbols: Mr. Westmacott’s Cows
Page Number: 234
Explanation and Analysis:

The great shadows of the cedars lay across the lawn; they had scarcely altered during her long tenancy, but the box hedge had been of her planting; it was she who had planned the lily pond and glorified it with lead flamingoes […] the flowering shrubs were hers; she could not take them with her where she was going. Where? She was too old now to begin another garden, to make other friends. She would move, like so many of her contemporaries, from hotel to hotel […].

Related Characters: Lady Peabury
Related Symbols: Gardens
Page Number: 234
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 5 Quotes

They drove to Mr. Hargood-Hood’s home, a double quadrangle of mellow brick that was famous far beyond the county. On the days when the gardens were open to the public, record crowds came to admire the topiary work, yews and boxes of prodigious size and fantastic shape which gave perpetual employment to three gardeners. Mr. Hargood-Hood’s ancestors had built the house and planted the gardens[...]. A sterner age demanded more strenuous efforts for their preservation.

Related Characters: Mr. Hargood-Hood
Related Symbols: Gardens
Page Number: 236-237
Explanation and Analysis:

Together the two brothers unfolded the inch ordnance map of Norfolk, spread it on the table of the Great Hall and began their preliminary, expert search for a likely, unspoilt, well-loved village.

Related Characters: Mr. Hargood-Hood
Page Number: 237
Explanation and Analysis:
No matches.