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Daily Inspiration Quote by David Lloyd George

"What is our task? To make Britain a fit country for heroes to live in"

About this Quote

A country “fit for heroes” is a compliment with teeth. Lloyd George frames the postwar moment as a moral debt: if the state can ask men to risk everything, it must be capable of giving something back that isn’t just medals and memory. The line works because it flips the usual patriotic script. Instead of heroes proving themselves worthy of the nation, the nation must prove itself worthy of the heroes.

The context is the end of World War I, when Britain faced the collision of victory parades with damaged bodies, shattered households, and a working class that had borne the war’s cost. “Heroes” isn’t only a tribute; it’s a political category that temporarily elevates ordinary soldiers into untouchable citizens. That elevation pressures Parliament: you can’t send these men back to slums, unemployment, and prewar indifference without exposing the hypocrisy of wartime unity.

The subtext is classic Lloyd George pragmatism dressed as righteousness. He is not just praising sacrifice; he’s building consent for a sweeping domestic agenda - housing, jobs, health, pensions - by tying reform to national honor. It’s a strategic recalibration of patriotism: the battlefield becomes leverage for the welfare state. The brilliance is its implied threat. If Britain fails this “task,” it doesn’t merely betray veterans; it undermines the legitimacy of the leaders who used lofty rhetoric to mobilize them. The sentence is short, almost catechistic, because it’s meant to travel: a slogan that makes social reconstruction sound like repayment, not radicalism.

Quote Details

TopicVision & Strategy
Source
Verified source: The Times: Report of Lloyd George speech at Wolverhampton (David Lloyd George, 1918)
Text match: 100.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
What is our task? To make Britain a fit country for heroes to live in. (p. 13 (25 November 1918 issue)). The earliest specific primary-source citation consistently given for this wording is Lloyd George’s Wolverhampton speech on 23 November 1918, as printed in The Times on 25 November 1918 (page 13). Multiple secondary discussions also point to the same newspaper printing as the contemporaneous publication of the line. However, I was not able (from openly accessible web pages) to view/scans the actual 25 Nov 1918 Times page to confirm the exact layout/headline and surrounding text; typically this requires access to The Times Digital Archive or a library database. If you need the highest-confidence verification, the next step is to open The Times issue dated 25 Nov 1918 and navigate to p. 13 to capture the article title and the full paragraph context.
Other candidates (1)
Britain and Its Empire in the Shadow of Rome (Sarah J. Butler, 2012) compilation95.0%
... David Lloyd George who reaffirmed the value of Rome's conservative ideology to Britain . In an election campaign ...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
George, David Lloyd. (2026, February 15). What is our task? To make Britain a fit country for heroes to live in. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/what-is-our-task-to-make-britain-a-fit-country-39125/

Chicago Style
George, David Lloyd. "What is our task? To make Britain a fit country for heroes to live in." FixQuotes. February 15, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/what-is-our-task-to-make-britain-a-fit-country-39125/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"What is our task? To make Britain a fit country for heroes to live in." FixQuotes, 15 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/what-is-our-task-to-make-britain-a-fit-country-39125/. Accessed 19 Feb. 2026.

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Make Britain a Fit Country for Heroes to Live In
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About the Author

David Lloyd George

David Lloyd George (January 17, 1863 - March 26, 1945) was a Statesman from Welsh.

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