Michael Palin quotes:

+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
  • One of the most important days of my life was when I learned to ride a bicycle.

  • Despite having seen a fair amount of the world, I still love travelling - I just have an insatiable curiosity and like looking out of a window.

  • I am restless. I don't mind leaving this comfortable, static life. I could live a year on my own in a remote village.

  • I do have high standards. I look at everything I have done and think, 'Why wasn't that better?' Part of my motivation is from crippling self-doubt - I have got to prove myself wrong.

  • Armageddon is not around the corner. This is only what the people of violence want us to believe. The complexity and diversity of the world is the hope for the future.

  • Listen -- strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government. Supreme executive power derives from a mandate from the masses, not from some farcical aquatic ceremony.

  • Fame changes everything. When you're well-known, you're expected to be different. Some people assume you must have a yacht and four homes. Or that you're famous because you are 'A Decent Man'.

  • I've never had a particular skill. I can't cook, dance, play an instrument, speak a foreign language. This used to worry me. I'd think, when I'm grown up, at 18, then I made it 21, it will be clear what role I should have in life. It never happened. I never signed on the dotted line as the sort of adult my father wanted.

  • I wanted to be an explorer, but gradually found the world had been explored and that there was nowhere left, really. Once they climbed Everest in 1953, when I was 10 years old, I thought, 'Well, that's pretty much it now.' But the idea of travelling and exploring and adventure was very strong.

  • When I'm travelling, I always take my little notebook and scribble things down as I watch them; I'm very much geared to everything that's happening. Whereas, the diary I keep is just about a record of a day I've spent. When I'm filming, I'm looking quite intensely at everything I see and trying to get my own eye on what we're going through.

  • When I read profiles of myself, I sometimes think: 'I have spent my whole life struggling to understand my motivations and impulses, and I've never quite sorted them out.'

  • The trouble with travelling back later on is that you can never repeat the same experience.

  • There is nothing better than playing a scene with John Cleese or Maggie Smith. It's electric. But I don't think I'm the sort of person who needs to have an outer ego in order to produce something. I realised that through the travel programmes.

  • Something about John Cleese was always very unsettled, I felt. There was always something else he wanted to do. He seemed constantly driven by this sense that there was a nirvana somewhere; some unique place where mind, body and soul would be utterly satisfied.

  • I've been lucky enough to stand on both poles, but the place that seemed the remotest to me was Butugychag, a former gulag in Siberia. It is completely cut off from the rest of the world.

  • I'm not your expert on Africa or animals or whatever. I'm not a travel writer or maker of documentaries. I was someone who doesn't know very much, trying to communicate.

  • I've always been blessed, or cursed, some might say, with an insatiable curiosity, a desire to find something out about a people and a place. That's where it all begins.

  • I got my first lifetime achievement award years ago, and I was very excited, but then I got a sense of: Well, can one get a second lifetime award?

  • I don't see why it should be remarkable that you can acquire a reputation for fairness and decency. Those are qualities shared by so many people. And the great majority of people I meet are decent people, just trying to navigate their way through the world without causing too much trouble.

  • People are still crazy about Python after twenty-five years, which I find hard to believe.

  • I've been lucky to have made a number of travel programmes with the BBC, the object being to see places off the beaten track. As a result, I've often had a guide who's been able to show me things that you wouldn't see with a tour group.

  • People look for patterns in everything. It's what keeps us sane, I suppose. I struggle to see any patterns in my life. I think I can understand depression a bit because of my sister. My own feelings of... I'm aware that, if you feel down, it can be strangely unrelated to circumstances around you. That's just the way life is.

  • I'm not good at confrontation. I know my strengths. I like company. And I am not a great arguer... I do find it much easier talking to people I like about things we both like.

  • I was very bad at projecting my voice. I used to do this Gumby Flower Arranging sketch which involved shouting, and I could never do it right, and at one point my voice went completely.

  • The kids growing up is a separate strand to your life. However bad a day you've had, that's the most important thing, and you have to remember that.

  • Hollywood was possible for a while! Why didn't I go along with it? Well, the other things that were pulling me back were more important. Being at home, being in the same marriage, these things enabled me to go off and travel in the first place.

  • [There] are people who make a complete and utter mockery of 'democracy' and 'equality' - they're the casualties of the primitive rules of competition which run our society, and the welfare state just keeps them alive. That's all.

  • I've never particularly liked travelling with large groups or being told where to go by somebody else. I prefer to find out for myself.

  • My parents have been married forty-two years. I wonder how many of those were happy.

  • I'd got over playing a character. People accepted who I was, and if I was incompetent and useless, they felt quite endeared to me.

  • I always wanted to be an explorer, but - it seemed I was doomed to be nothing more than a very silly person.

  • I am not a great cook, I am not a great artist, but I love art, and I love food, so I am the perfect traveller.

  • Geography prepares for the world of work - geographers, with their skills of analysis are highly employable!

  • John Hall, my geography teacher at school inspired me to a lifelong interest in geography and a curiosity about our world which has stayed with me through my life. Geography is a living, breathing subject, constantly adapting itself to change. It is dynamic and relevant. For me geography is a great adventure with a purpose.

  • Once the travel bug bites there is no known antidote, and I know that I shall be happily infected until the end of my life

  • Night falls over Machu Picchu to the sound of Abba's 'Dancing Queen'.

  • I would love to go to Iran. The island of Madagascar, everyone says is pretty exotic, or the wonderful Namibian desert.

  • There are many ways of seeing the world. You can hang upside down from a meteor, volunteer to be the fourth stage of a three-stage rocket, or simply get in a balloon and keep going. But if it's sheer, unadulterated discomfort you're looking for, just stay on land.

  • I think some of the best modern writing comes now from travellers.

  • Somewhere, a long way away, people are doing sensible things like mowing lawns and digging gardens.

  • I want people to know there is more to Somalia than looting and piracy.

  • I know that we shall meet problems along the way, but I'd far rather see for myself what's going on in the world outside, than rely on newspapers, television, politicians and religious leaders to tell me what I should be thinking.

  • Contrary to what the politicians and religious leaders would like us to believe, the world won't be made safer by creating barriers between people.

  • I have been unusually blessed in that I've been allowed to pursue two strands of a career that both delight me and seem to please the public.

  • I remember queuing around the block in Sheffield when I was growing up. At that time, going to the cinema was really something special - there was something about the style of the real thing that is immeasurable nicer than multiplexes.

  • People say the most stupid things on the spur of the moment that they then have to retract.

  • Now, what sort of person would write a scene where a young man stumbles upon a castle full only of beautiful young women? Answer: ME!

  • I think you learn a lot about a country from its art. To me, it's part of the drama of life. It teaches you that there are places, moments and incidents in other cultures that genuinely have a life of their own.

  • I am certainly more interested in interviewing than being interviewed. Sometimes you find yourself attacked from the start.

  • There are people who travel because they want to push themselves to physical limits, people who walk across deserts or cycle across the Antarctic - like Ranulph Fiennes, who just does it because it's there. And then there are people like me, who are just genuinely curious about the world.

  • If you had a successful TV show, people wanted to see you live. Promoters had had practice with pop groups, and 'Python' achieved a similar status. We also had lots of rock star fans - George Harrison, Pink Floyd, Robert Plant. Promoters saw that and liked it.

  • 'The Truth' is not meant to preach or point any fingers. It's meant to show that perhaps we should all avoid taking the moral high ground unless we have thought about things a bit more.

  • The Truth' is not meant to preach or point any fingers. It's meant to show that perhaps we should all avoid taking the moral high ground unless we have thought about things a bit more.

  • The human race should just slow down and think about what it is doing.

  • All I ask of food is that it doesn't harm me.

  • As I work in the afternoon on committing to paper some of my morning's thoughts, I find myself just about to close on the knotty question of whether or not I believe in God. In fact I am about to type, 'I do not believe in God', when the sky goes black as ink, there is a thunderclap and a huge crash of thunder and a downpour of epic proportions. I never do complete the sentence.

  • First shalt thou take out the Holy Pin. Then shalt thou count to three, no more-no less. Three shall be the number thou shalt count, and the number of the counting shall be three. Four shalt thou not count, neither count thou two, excepting that thou then proceed to three. Five is right out. Once the number three, being the third number, be reached, then lobbest thou thy Holy Hand Grenade of Antioch towards thy foe, who, being naughty in my sight, shall snuff it.

  • From my travels around the world I have seen how much damage and pollution is done by the careless disposal of waste. It is also evident that we in the West produce far more and throw away far more than the developing world, almost without thinking

  • Geography is the subject which holds the key to our future

  • George Harrison's passing was really sad, but it does make the afterlife seem much more attractive.

  • I am very cautious of people who are absolutely right, especially when they are vehemently so.

  • I can be me, and people seem quite happy with that.

  • I cut down trees, I skip and jump, I like to press wild flowers. I put on women's clothing and hang around in bars.

  • I enjoy writing, I enjoy my house, my family and, more than anything I enjoy the feeling of seeing each day used to the full to actually produce something. The end.

  • I mistrust total competence. I've always felt life is a series of small disasters we try to get through.

  • I saw novelists as being admirable people and I thought... I thought... maybe, one day, I could be one of them.

  • I will die, but not retire.

  • If atheists are deaf to the word of God, then theists are blind to the ways of man.

  • If I am seen as successful, it's all the more reason not to change - not to lose track of friends, not to be driven everywhere, not to go and get away from the world. That, to me, is real success: enjoying what you do, but being the same person.

  • I'm aware that, if you feel down, it can be strangely unrelated to circumstances around you. That's just the way life is.

  • In the absence of fear there is little faith.

  • It was a strange feeling going into a church I did not know for a service that I did not really believe in, but once inside I couldn't help a feeling of warmth and security. Outside there were wars and road accidents and murders, striptease clubs and battered babies and frayed tempers and unhappy marriages and people contemplating suicide and bad jokes, but once in St. Martin's there was peace. Surely people go to church not to involve themselves in the world's problems but to escape from them.

  • It's not a model if it's full-size. It's a ice-breaker!

  • It's not an easy option. The essence of travel is letting go of habit and prejudice and relishing the unfamiliar. Food you've never eaten before, a language you've never spoken before, religion that mystifies, customs that confuse, politics that perplex, all question everyday assumptions about how you live your life.

  • My marriage has worked because I am not around much.

  • 'Nice' means nothing. Is it someone who doesn't swear and shout? I swear and shout. 'Nice' sounds ineffectual.

  • Once the travel bug bites, there is no known antidote.

  • One of the difficult things of so much travelling is to say goodbye.

  • Please don't ask which I enjoy more - acting or hosting - because I love them equally.

  • Ronnie Barker was a straightforward man who had this extraordinary ability to make the nation laugh

  • The Buddhist version of poverty is a situation where you have nothing to contribute.

  • The need to eat, sleep and dry out plays havoc with your sense of wonder.

  • There is barely a country in the world where you will be completely safe.

  • When in doubt, resort to animation.

  • You can't get a suit of armour and a rubber chicken just like that. You have to plan ahead.

  • You don't ask people about the immigration policies of the U.K. or their country's agricultural policy. Instead, you talk to them about the meal they're eating or their family, and from that you get the sense of another human being, someone we can all relate to.

+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share