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Queen Elizabeth’s Best Quotes Through the Year

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Queen Elizabeth’s Best Quotes Through the Years

 

It’s worth remembering that it is often the small steps, not the giant leaps, that bring about the most lasting change.”
— in her 2019 Christmas broadcast

 

Let us not take ourselves too seriously. None of us has a monopoly on wisdom.”
— in her 1991 Christmas broadcast

 

I believe that, young or old, we have as much to look forward to with confidence and hope as we have to look back on with pride.
— the Queen’s Golden Jubilee message, June 2012

 

Our modern world places such heavy demands on our time and attention that the need to remember our responsibilities to others is greater than ever.”
— in her 2002 Christmas broadcast

 

Each day is a new beginning, I know that the only way to live my life is to try to do what is right, to take the long view, to give of my best in all that the day brings, and to put my trust in God.
— in her 2002 Christmas broadcast

 

When life seems hard, the courageous do not lie down and accept defeat; instead, they are all the more determined to struggle for a better future
— in her 2008 Christmas broadcast

 

Perhaps we make too much of what is wrong and too little of what is right. The trouble with gloom is that it feeds upon itself and depression causes more depression.
— in her 1974 Christmas broadcast

 

In times of doubt and anxiety the attitudes people show in their daily lives, in their homes, and in their work, are of supreme importance.
— in her 1974 Christmas broadcast

 

Although we are capable of great acts of kindness, history teaches us that we sometimes need saving from ourselves–from our recklessness or our greed.
— in her 2011 Christmas broadcast

 

It is through this lens of history that we should view the conflicts of today, and so give us hope for tomorrow.”
— in her 2011 Christmas broadcast

 

Everyone is our neighbour, no matter what race, creed or colour.”
— in her 2004 Christmas broadcast

 

If we resolve to be considerate and to help our neighbours; to make friends with people of different races and religions; and, as our Lord said, to look to our own faults before we criticise others, we will be keeping faith with those who landed in Normandy and fought so doggedly for their belief in freedom, peace and human decency.”
— in her 1994 Christmas broadcast

 

With age does come experience and that can be a virtue if it is sensibly used. By being willing to put past differences behind us and move forward together, we honour the freedom and democracy once won for us at so great a cost.
— in her 1998 Christmas broadcast

 

No age group has a monopoly of wisdom, and indeed I think the young can sometimes be wiser than us. But the older I get, the more conscious I become of the difficulties young people have to face as they learn to live in the modern world.”
— in her 1998 Christmas broadcast

 

We know the reward is peace on earth, goodwill toward men, but we cannot win it without determination and concerted effort.”
— in her 1963 Christmas broadcast

 

It has been women who have breathed gentleness and care into the harsh progress of mankind.”
— in her 1966 Christmas broadcast

 

Whatever life throws at us, our individual responses will be all the stronger for working together and sharing the load.
— in 2011 at the Queen’s Ireland state banquet

 

Inevitably, a long life can pass by many milestones; my own is no exception.”
— in a 2015 speech at the Borders Railway, Scotland

 

Though we each lead different lives, the experience of growing older, and the joys and emotions which it brings, are familiar to us all.”
— in her 1998 Christmas broadcast

 

It has always been easy to hate and destroy. To build and to cherish is much more difficult.”
— in her 1957 Christmas broadcast

 

I know of no single formula for success, but over the years I have observed that some attributes of leadership are universal, and are often about finding ways of encouraging people to combine their efforts, their talents, their insights, their enthusiasm and their inspiration, to work together.”
— in her address to the United Nations General Assembly in July 2010

 

 

And when peace comes, remember it will be for us, the children of today, to make the world of tomorrow a better and happier place.”

— the Queen’s wartime broadcast (and her first public speech) in 1940, when she was still Princess Elizabeth

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