The Children Act Quotes

  • Fiona Maye: Life is more precious than dignity.

  • Adam Henry: My choice... my lady.

  • Adam Henry: The law is an ass.

  • Jack Maye: How'd it go?

    Fiona Maye: I just gave orders to slaughter a baby. That's what the papers say.

    Jack Maye: Ah, yes. I saw that.

  • Adam Henry: I'd say you were an interfering busybody.

  • Jack Maye: I think I want to have an affair.

  • Jack Maye: Do you remember how we were? Do you remember how we

    [taps Fiona's forearm thrice]

    Jack Maye: ? Don't you miss that?

  • [First Lines]

    Jack Maye: Are you coming to bed?

    Fiona Maye: [continues typing without turning around to look at Jack] Hmm.

    Jack Maye: Fi?

    Fiona Maye: It's tomorrow, the... My conjoined twins. Judgement. I've got the bloody Archbishop of Westminster breathing down my neck.

  • Fiona Maye: This court is a court of law not of morals.

  • Jack Maye: Look, you wanna live like this? Fine. I don't. I'm going to have this affair.

    Fiona Maye: And a divorce and the child I've failed to give you?

    Jack Maye: No. No divorce, no deception, no lies. I love you and we're meant to be together but... look, I could have gone behind your back.

    Fiona Maye: Oh, how very kind. I can't believe how cool we are. Open marriage. The time to suggest that, Jack, was before the wedding, not twenty years afterwards.

  • Jack Maye: [about marital sex] Don't you miss it, Fi? Or is it just because you don't want it, I can't have it? Is that the deal?

  • Fiona Maye: I am bound by The Children Act, and the clear injunction of its opening lines. The child's wellfare shall be the courts paramount consideration. Assuming a good recovery, this young man's welfare is better served by his love of reading and his newly found passion for the guitar, by the exercise of his lively intelligence and by the expression of a playful affectionate nature and by all of live and love that lie ahead of him.

  • Fiona Maye: [kicks Jack's trolley bag to the front door] Excuse me, long day.

    [walks into the study and slams the door shut]

  • Jack Maye: Listen, I left this marriage for two days. Two days. *You* left it years ago.

  • Fiona Maye: Well, do join me. I'm afraid all I can promise you is two neglected children.

  • Adam Henry: When I had the blood, my parents were there. I saw them, hugging each other, and crying, really sobbing. They'd lost the case and they'd tried *so* hard. But then I realized, no. No, they were crying for joy. 'coz they'd always wanted me to live and they'd never told me. It wasn't about god at all. I felt cheated, like I'd been really stupid. The whole thing was a fraud.

  • Adam Henry: I don't care if you think you're too grand to explain yourself, 'coz I have a right to know.

  • Jack Maye: I've been watching you sleep.

    Fiona Maye: Thank you.

  • Fiona Maye: But you don't know.

    Jack Maye: Then tell me. Everything.

    Fiona Maye: Will you still love me?

Extended Reading
  • Kurt 2022-03-16 09:01:07

    The eyes in front of the hospital bed that had seen AR farewell

  • Erwin 2022-03-20 09:02:46

    The parents proceeded with a failing lawsuit, and the judge announced a doomed sentence. Belief made the teenager refuse to inject blood from others, and marriage made the wife resist her husband to inject body fluids into others. The law saves lives from faith and also pushes marriage into desperation. Loyal to the faith and loyal to the marriage, but young and indifferent. When we take off our robes, pick up our guitars, and talk about Yeats and rising pitch on a cruise, we don't have to experience the taste of betrayal. Please sing to me again in Sally Garden.