- Mr. Royce: Breakdown on the Central Line again, Mr Beckett?
- Joe Beckett: Yeah, that's right.
- Mr. Royce: It won't do, Mr. Beckett. It's not good enough.
- Joe Beckett: I set off at half past eight, Mr, Royce.
- Mr. Royce: Then we have to set off just that little bit earlier. Business in this establishment commences at 9.00 am. We don't require you here at ten-to, but we don't expect you here at ten past. Nine o'clock.
- Joe Beckett: [sotto voce] Aw, shut up.
- Mr. Royce: And we don't wear coloured shirts during business hours, Mr Beckett, whatever we may do outside.
- Speaker: [addressing a rally of the Britain First Party] And now we come to the other argument that these people use: the naive, sentimental argument that they use when they are confronted by the facts. The argument that we force these people, these Indians, these Pakistanis, that we force them to live in slum conditions. Now, let us examine this argument. We do not force, you and I, we do not force these foreigners to come here. We do not force them to take our houses and to undercut our jobs.
- Heckler: I fought a bloody war against bastards like you!
- Speaker: There we have an example of the kind of hoodlum who would prevent free speech in London.
- [more heckling from the crowd]
- Speaker: In this borough, in the year 1951, the coloured population was one tenth of what it was in the last quarter of last year. A tenth! Ten times as many coloured people have moved into this borough.
- football supporter on train: [looking at the paper] Forty three killed in an air crash, look at it. Wouldn't get me up in an aeroplane.
- football supporter on train: Talking of the dead, what's Chelsea doing?
- football supporter on train: No score.