Madison Sharp > Madison's Quotes

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  • #1
    Lucy Score
    “There’s a difference between taking care of someone because you love them and taking care of someone because you want them to love you,”
    Lucy Score, Things We Never Got Over

  • #2
    Prince Harry
    “(The fonder the memory, the deeper the ache.)”
    Prince Harry, Spare

  • #3
    Prince Harry
    “The Heir and the Spare—there was no judgment about it, but also no ambiguity. I was the shadow, the support, the Plan B. I was brought into the world in case something happened to Willy. I was summoned to provide backup, distraction, diversion and, if necessary, a spare part. Kidney, perhaps. Blood transfusion. Speck of bone marrow. This was all made explicitly clear to me from the start of life’s journey and regularly reinforced thereafter.”
    Prince Harry, Spare

  • #4
    Prince Harry
    “I love my Mother Country, and I love my family, and I always will. I just wish, at the second-darkest moment of my life, they'd been there for me too.

    And I believe they'll look back one day and wish they had too.”
    Prince Harry, Spare

  • #5
    Prince Harry
    “I heard the story of what Pa allegedly said to Mummy the day of
    my birth: Wonderful! Now you’ve given me an Heir and a Spare—my work is
    done. A joke. Presumably. On the other hand, minutes after delivering this bit of
    high comedy, Pa was said to have gone off to meet with his girlfriend. So. Many
    a true word spoken in jest.”
    Prince Harry, Spare
    tags: humor

  • #6
    Prince Harry
    “What hell, being an adult!”
    Prince Harry, Spare

  • #7
    Prince Harry
    “I told them that I failed to see how speaking to Oprah was any different from what my family and their staff had done for decades – briefing the press on the sly, planting stories. And what about the endless books on which they’d co-operated, starting with Pa’s 1994 crypto-autobiography with Jonathan Dimbleby? Or Camilla’s collaborations with the editor Geordie Greig? The only difference was that Meg and I were upfront about it. We chose an interviewer who was above reproach, and we didn’t once hide behind phrases like “Palace sources”, we let people see the words coming out of our mouths.”
    Prince Harry, Spare

  • #8
    Prince Harry
    “Maybe money sits at the heart of every controversy about monarchy. Britain has long had trouble making up its mind. Many support the Crown, but many also feel anxious about the cost. That anxiety is increased by the fact that the cost is unknowable. Depends on who’s crunching the numbers. Does the Crown cost taxpayers? Yes. Does it also pay a fortune into government coffers? Also yes. Does the Crown generate tourism income that benefits all? Of course. Does it also rest upon lands obtained and secured when the system was unjust and wealth was generated by exploited workers and thuggery, annexation and enslaved people? Can anyone deny it? According to the last study I saw, the monarchy costs the average taxpayer the price of a pint each year. In light of its many good works that seems a pretty sound investment. But no one wants to hear a prince argue for the existence of a monarchy, any more than they want to hear a prince argue against it. I leave cost-benefit analyses to others. My emotions are complicated on this subject, naturally, but my bottom-line position isn’t. I’ll forever support my Queen, my Commander in Chief, my Granny. Even after she’s gone. My problem has never been with the monarchy, nor the concept of monarchy. It’s been with the press and the sick relationship that’s evolved between it and the Palace. I love my Mother Country, and I love my family, and I always will. I just wish, at the second-darkest moment of my life, they’d both been there for me. And I believe they’ll look back one day and wish they had too.”
    Prince Harry, Spare

  • #9
    Prince Harry
    “Is each generation doomed to unwittingly repeat the sins of the last?”
    Prince Harry, Spare

  • #10
    Prince Harry
    “She said: That was everything. She said: That is a man. My love. She said: That is not a Spare.”
    Prince Harry, Spare

  • #11
    Prince Harry
    “In this mixed-up world, this pain-filled life, we’d done it. we’d managed to find each other.”
    Prince Harry, Spare

  • #12
    Prince Harry
    “In some ways he was my mirror, in some ways he was my opposite. My beloved brother, my arch-nemesis, how had that happened?”
    Prince Harry, Spare

  • #13
    Prince Harry
    “It struck me at some point that the whole basis of education was memory. A list of names, a column of numbers, a mathematical formula, a beautiful poem—to learn it you had to upload it to the part of the brain that stored stuff, but that was the same part of my brain I was resisting. My memory had been spotty since Mummy disappeared, by design, and I didn’t want to fix it, because memory equaled grief.

    Not remembering was balm.”
    Prince Harry, Spare

  • #14
    Prince Harry
    “Grief is a thing best shared.”
    Prince Harry, Spare

  • #15
    Prince Harry
    “Maybe she was omnipresent for the very same reason that she was indescribable—because she was light, pure and radiant light, and how can you really describe light? Even Einstein struggled with that one.”
    Prince Harry, Spare

  • #16
    Prince Harry
    “Weddings were joyous occasions, sure, but they were also low-key funerals, because after saying their vows people tended to disappear.”
    Prince Harry, Spare

  • #17
    Prince Harry
    “not to be devastated by my mistake, but instead to be motivated. He spoke to me with the quality one often encounters in truly wise people—forgiveness.”
    Prince Harry, Spare

  • #18
    Prince Harry
    “My family had declared me a nullity. The Spare. I didn’t complain about it, but I didn’t need to dwell on it either. Far better, in my mind, not to think about certain facts, such as the cardinal rule for royal travel: Pa and William could never be on the same flight together, because there must be no chance of the first and second in line to the throne being wiped out. But no one gave a damn whom I traveled with; the Spare could always be spared.”
    Prince Harry, Spare

  • #19
    Prince Harry
    “He was, I realize now, one of the most truthful people I’ve ever known, and he knew a secret about truth that many people are unwilling to accept: it’s usually painful.”
    Prince Harry, Spare

  • #20
    Prince Harry
    “With bagpipes it’s not the tune, it’s the tone.”
    Prince Harry, Spare

  • #21
    Prince Harry
    “Being royal, it turned out, wasn’t all that far from being onstage. Acting was acting, no matter the context.”
    Prince Harry, Spare

  • #22
    Prince Harry
    “No one had an answer for a boy actually seeking external pain to match his internal.”
    Prince Harry, Spare

  • #23
    Prince Harry
    “I remember the mounds of flowers all around us. I remember feeling unspeakable sorrow and yet being unfailingly polite. I remember old ladies saying: Oh, my, how polite, the poor boy! I remember muttering thanks, over and over, thank you for coming, thank you for saying that, thank you for camping out here for several days. I remember consoling several folks who were prostrate, overcome, as if they knew Mummy, but also thinking: You didn’t, though. You act as if you did…but you didn’t know her.”
    Prince Harry, Spare

  • #24
    Prince Harry
    “I'd traveled the world from top to bottom, literally. I'd hopscotched the continents. I'd met hundreds of thousands of people, I'd crossed paths with a ludicrously large cross-section of the planet's seven billion residents. For thirty-two years I'd watched a conveyor-belt of faces pass by and only a handful ever made me look twice. This woman stopped the conveyer belt.”
    Prince Harry, Spare

  • #25
    Prince Harry
    “Never complain, never explain.”
    Prince Harry, Spare

  • #26
    Prince Harry
    “Sadly, we were going to have to flee. We’d need to find somewhere new, and soon, and that would mean paying for our own security. I went back to my notebooks, started contacting security firms again. Meg and I sat down to work out exactly how much security we could afford, and how much house. Exactly then, while we were revising our budget, word came down: Pa was cutting me off. I recognized the absurdity, a man in his mid-thirties being financially cut off by his father. But Pa wasn’t merely my father, he was my boss, my banker, my comptroller, keeper of the purse strings throughout my adult life. Cutting me off therefore meant firing me, without redundancy pay, and casting me into the void after a lifetime of service. More, after a lifetime of rendering me otherwise unemployable. I felt fatted for the slaughter. Suckled like a veal calf. I’d never asked to be financially dependent on Pa. I’d been forced into this surreal state, this unending Truman Show in which I almost never carried money, never owned a car, never carried a house key, never once ordered anything online, never received a single box from Amazon, almost never traveled on the Underground. (Once, at Eton, on a theater trip.) Sponge, the papers called me. But there’s a big difference between being a sponge and being prohibited from learning independence. After decades of being rigorously and systematically infantilized, I was now abruptly abandoned, and mocked for being immature? For not standing on my own two feet? The question of how to pay for a home and security kept Meg and me awake at nights. We could always spend some of my inheritance from Mummy, we said, but that felt like a last resort. We saw that money as belonging to Archie. And his sibling. It was then that we learned Meg was pregnant.”
    Prince Harry, Spare

  • #27
    Prince Harry
    “Later, after we’d brought her home, after we’d settled into all the new rhythms of a family of four, Meg and I were skin to skin and she said: I’ve never been more in love with you than in that moment. Really? Really. She jotted some thoughts in a kind of journal. Which she shared. I read them as a love poem. I read them as a testament, a renewal of our vows. I read them as a citation, a remembrance, a proclamation. I read them as a decree. She said: That was everything. She said: That is a man. My love. She said: That is not a Spare.”
    Prince Harry, Spare

  • #28
    Prince Harry
    “In a lifetime of existential crises, this was a bugger. Who are you when you can no longer be the thing you’ve always been, the thing you’ve trained to be?”
    Prince Harry, Spare

  • #29
    Prince Harry
    “How beautiful it all is, I thought. And also how sad.”
    Prince Harry, Spare

  • #30
    Prince Harry
    “But another part of me felt hugely ambitious. People assumed that the Spare wouldn’t or shouldn’t have any ambition. People assumed that royals generally had no career desires or anxieties. You’re royal, everything’s done for you, why worry? But in fact I worried quite a lot about making my own way, finding my purpose in this world. I didn’t want to be one of those cocktail-slurping, eyeroll-causing sloths everyone avoided at family gatherings. There had been plenty of those in my family, going back centuries.”
    Prince Harry, Spare



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