The Book of Great Funny One-Liners (3 page)

Read The Book of Great Funny One-Liners Online

Authors: Frank Allen

Tags: #The Book of Great Funny One-Liners

BOOK: The Book of Great Funny One-Liners
8.15Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Stubby Kaye, American comic actor

She could very well pass for forty-three. In the dusk with the light behind her.

W.S. Gilbert, British librettist

Take those scales out of the bathroom; the right place for them is in front of the refrigerator.

Richard Needham, British politician

The tautness of his face sours ripe grapes.

William Shakespeare, British dramatist

A four-hundred-dollar suit on him would look like socks on a rooster.

American politician Earl Long on an anonymous rival

My mother-in-law’s face is her fortune. She pays no income tax.

Les Dawson, British comedian

Handsome? He looked like a dog’s bum with a hat on.

Spike Milligan, British actor and comedian

Outside every thin woman is a fat woman dying to get in.

Katherine Whitehorn, British journalist

I have no boobs whatsoever. On my wedding night my husband said, ‘Let me help you with those buttons’ and I told him, ‘I’m completely naked.’

Joan Rivers, American comedian

God knew from all eternity that I was going to be Pope. You think he would have made me more photogenic.

Pope John XXIII

Why don’t you get a haircut? You look like a chrysanthemum.

P.G. Wodehouse, British writer

She is a peacock in everything but beauty.

Oscar Wilde, Irish playwright and wit

Foreigners and Their
Parts

When asked by an anthropologist what the Indians called America before the white man came, an Indian simply said ‘Ours’.

Vine Deloria, American anthropologist

America is a society which believes that God is dead but Elvis is alive.

Irving Kupcinet, American columnist

It is by the goodness of God that in our country we have those three unspeakably precious things: freedom of speech, freedom of conscience, and the prudence to never practice either of them.

Mark Twain, American writer

I went to join the New York public library. The guy told me I had to prove I was a citizen of New York, so I stabbed him.

Emo Philips, American comedian

There won’t be any revolution in America… the people are too clean. They spend all their time changing their shirts and washing themselves. You can’t feel fierce and revolutionary in a bathroom.

Eric Linklater, British writer

Britain has invented a new missile. It’s called the civil servant—it doesn’t work and it can’t be fired.

Walter Walker, British general

Canada could have enjoyed English government, French culture and American know-how. Instead it ended up with English know-how, French government and American culture.

John Robert Columbo, Canadian poet

The softer the currency in a foreign country, the harder the toilet paper.

John Fountain, American writer

The English winter—ending in July, to recommence in August.

George Gordon, British academic

The only pleasure an Englishman has is in passing on his cold germs.

Gerald Durrell, British author

I like the English. The English may not like music, but they absolutely love the noise it makes.

Thomas Beecham, British conductor

Those comfortably padded lunatic asylums which are known, euphemistically, as the stately homes of England.

Virginia Woolf, British writer

The English never smash in a face. They merely refrain from asking it to dinner.

Margaret Halsey, American writer

British education is probably the best in the world, if you can survive it. If you can’t there is nothing left for you but the diplomatic corps.

Peter Ustinov, British comedian and actor

The English people on the whole are surely the nicest people in the world, and everybody makes everything so easy for everyone else, that there is almost nothing to resist at all.

D. H. Lawrence, British author

It is no longer true that Continentals have a sex life whereas the English have hot water bottles—the English now have electric blankets.

George Mikes, Hungarian-British writer

Much may be made of a Scotchman, if he be caught young.

Samuel Johnson, English writer and lexicographer

I have been trying all my life to like Scotsmen, and am obliged to desist from the experiment in despair.

Charles Lamb, English essayist

The Irish climate is wonderful, but the weather ruins it.

Tony Butler, British sports broadcaster

If one could teach the English to talk and the Irish to listen, society would be quite civilised.

Oscar Wilde, Irish playwright and wit

The French don’t care what they do as long as they pronounce it properly.

George Bernard Shaw, Irish playwright

When St Patrick first visited Ireland there was no word in the Irish language to express sobriety.

Oliver St John Gogarty, Irish physician

Given the unlikely options of attending a funeral or a sex orgy, a true Irishman will always opt for the funeral.

John B. Keane, Irish writer

A complete description of Belfast is given by: population 200,000; early closing day Wednesday.

Shamus O’Shamus, Irish comedian

Heaven is an English policeman, a French cook, a German engineer, an Italian lover and everything organised by the Swiss. Hell is an English cook, a French engineer, a German policeman, a Swiss lover and everything organised by the Italians.

John Elliot, American songwriter

The Swiss are not so much a people as a neat, clean, quite solvent business.

William Faulkner, American novelist

We had a very successful trip to Russia—we got back.

Bob Hope, American comedian

An Iranian moderate is one who has run out of ammunition.

Henry Kissinger, German-American politician

Germans are flummoxed by humour, the Swiss have no concept of fun, the Spanish think there is nothing at all ridiculous about eating dinner at midnight, and the Italians should never, ever have been let in on the invention of the motor car.

Bill Bryson, American author

I do not see the EEC as a great love affair. It is more like nine middle-aged couples with failing marriages meeting at a Brussels hotel for a group grope.

Kenneth Tynan, British writer

The high standards of Australians are due to the fact that their ancestors were all handpicked by the best English judges.

Douglas Copeland, Canadian novelist

There are only two classes of persons in New South Wales—those who have been convicted and those who ought to have been.

Lachlan Macquarie, governor of the colony of New South Wales

Many people are surprised to hear we have comedians in Russia, but there they are. They are dead, but there they are.

‘Vacation’ is the word Americans use to describe going someplace different to have fun and get away from all their trials and tribulations. The English call it ‘holiday’. In Russia it’s known as ‘defecting’.

Yakov Smirnoff, Ukranian-American comedian

Human by
Correspondence

A conservative government is an organised hypocrisy.

Benjamin Disraeli, British statesman

If Gladstone fell into the Thames, that would be a misfortune, and if anybody pulled him out of that, I suppose, would be a calamity.

Benjamin Disraeli on fellow British Prime Minister William Gladstone

He is a self-made man and worships his creator.

British statesman John Bright on Benjamin Disraeli

He never spares himself in conversation. He gives himself so generously that hardly anyone else is permitted to give anything in his presence.

British politician Aneurin Bevan on Winston Churchill

Aneurin Bevan is a thrombosis. A bloody clot that undermines the constitution.

Winston Churchill, British statesman

The Prime Minister has an absolute genius for putting flamboyant labels on empty luggage.

British politician Aneurin Bevan on Harold Macmillan

Giving money and power to the government is like giving whiskey and car keys to teenage boys.

P.J. O’Rourke, American writer

Tony Blair has pushed moderation to extremes.

Robert MacLennan, Scottish politician

This island is made mainly of coal and is surrounded by fish. Only an organising genius could produce a shortage of coal and fish at the same time.

British politician Aneurin Bevan on the Tory Party

It was said Mr Gladstone could convince most people of most things, and himself of anything.

British clergyman Dean William R. Inge on William Gladstone

Aneurin Bevan of course was himself far from being universally admired. He even felt the betrayal of his own Labour Party exclaiming once to them: ‘Damn it all, you can’t have the crown of thorns and the thirty pieces of silver!’

Daily Express
comment on Bevan

My colleagues tell military secrets to their wives, except Asquith who tells them to other people’s wives.

Lord Kitchener (the model for the famous and oft-imitated
I Want You
poster of WWI).

We’d all like to vote for the best man but he’s never a candidate.

Kin Hubbard, American cartoonist and humorist

Winston is always expecting rabbits to come out of empty hats.

Field Marshall Lord Waveil on Winston Churchill’s handling of WWII

The Honourable Gentleman should not generate more indignation than he can conveniently contain.

Winston Churchill to an overly irate politician William Wedgwood Benn

I have a great admiration for Mussolini, who has welded a nation out of a collection of touts, blackmailers, ice-cream vendors and gangsters.

Michael Bateman, British journalist

If Max gets to Heaven he won’t last long. He will be chucked out for trying to pull off a merger between Heaven and Hell… after having secured a controlling interest in key subsidiary companies in both places, of course.

Briish writer H.G. Wells on Lord Beaverbrook.

His ear is so sensitively attuned to the bugle note of history that he is often deaf to the more raucous clamour of modern life.

British Labour politician Aneurin Bevan on Winston Churchill

John Major is the only man who ran away from the circus to become an accountant.

Edward Pearce, British writer

When you have a skunk it is better to have him inside the tent pissing out than outside pissing in.

President Lyndon B. Johnson on J. Edgar Hoover

Harold Wilson is going around the country stirring up apathy.

William Whitelaw, British politician

The best description of Margaret Thatcher I ever heard is that she’s just the sort of woman who wouldn’t give you your ball back.

Mike Harding, British comedian

Trust J. Edgar Hoover as much as you would a rattlesnake with a silencer on his rattle.

Dean Acheson. American statesman

A fool and his money are soon elected.

Will Rogers, American humorist

Rumsfeld is admired as a genius by people who find conceit alone to be evidence of genius.

Beast
magazine’s description of Donald Rumsfeld

Politics is derived from two words—poly, meaning many, and tics, meaning small, blood-sucking insects.

Chris Clayton, American writer

Ambassador,
n. A person who, having failed to secure an office from the people, is given one by the administration on the condition that he leaves the country.

Ambrose Bierce, American writer

A statesman is a dead politician. We need more statesmen.

Bob Edwards, American radio host

Nixon impeached himself. He gave us Gerald Ford as revenge.

Bella Abzug, American feminist

A year ago Gerald Ford was unknown around the country. Now he’s unknown throughout the world.

Norman Mailer, American writer

Most politicians look like people who have become human by correspondence course.

A.A. Gill, British columnist

Some Republicans are so ignorant that they wouldn’t know how to pour piss out of a boot—even if the instructions were written on the heel.

Lyndon B. Johnson, American president

One could drive a schooner through any part of his argument and never scrape against a fact.

David Houston on fellow American politician William Jennings Bryan

As an intellectual he bestowed upon the games of golf and bridge all the enthusiasm and perseverance that he withheld from books and ideas.

American writer Emmet Hughes on Dwight Eisenhower

To err is Truman.

Walter Winchell, American commentator

All political parties die at last from swallowing their own lies.

John Arbuthnot, Scottish writer and physician

Mr Howard and his government are just Yes-men to the United States. There they are, a conga line of suckholes on the conservative side of Australian politics.

Australian politician Mark Lathamon John Howard

In Pierre Trudeau Canada has at last produced a politician worthy of assassination.

Irving Layton, Canadian poet

Under democracy one party always devotes its chief energies to trying to prove that the other party is unfit to rule, and both commonly succeed, and are right.

H. L. Mencken, American journalist

There are two politicians drowning and you are allowed to save only one. What do you do? Read a newspaper or eat your lunch?

Mort Sahl, American comedian

If there had been any formidable body of cannibals in the country he would have promised to provide them with free missionaries, fattened at the taxpayer’s expense.

American journalist H.L. Mencken on Harry Truman’s 1948 presidential campaign

Asked if they’d have sex with President Clinton, 90 per cent of American women replied ‘Never again.’

Albert Roge, American writer

A semi-housetrained polecat.

Michael Foot on Norman Tebbit

Bill Clinton is the only politician in the world who can distract people’s attention from one sex scandal by being involved in another.

Other books

Regenesis by C J Cherryh
The Obedient Wife by Carolyn Faulkner
The Abbot's Gibbet by Michael Jecks
Cicada by J. Eric Laing
Morning Song by Karen Robards
IT Manager's Handbook: Getting Your New Job Done by Bill Holtsnider, Brian D. Jaffe
Silk Stalkings by Diane Vallere