Come. We shall ask my daughter to look for yours in heaven. I ken she will find her there.

Jamie

Jamie: The women in my family are those who see in dreams what is to come. Both my wife and my daughter have seen something concerning your people, though it grieves me to tell you. Some 60 years from now, your people will be taken from their land, from the bones of their ancestors. They'll be removed to a, a new place far from here. Many will die on this journey, so much that the path they tread will be called, um, the trail where they wept.
Kwiskwa: Who will do this?
Jamie: A man named Winfield Scott, my daughter says, a general.
Kwiskwa: It is good you have given us the weapons, then.
Jamie: No. Twenty muskets against 20,000? It wilna save you.
Kwiskwa: What is the benefit of your warning, then?
Jamie: I canna warn many. If I did, they would call me a madman. But I can warn you. You should not go to this new place or fight. But when the time comes, your people must hide.
Kwiskwa: And by hiding, they will escape what is to come?
Jamie: I hope so. If you pass this warning to your descendants, then perhaps they will escape and live.
Kwiskwa: I will tell my sons and my sons' sons, but we will remember.
Jamie: Whoever you fight for, be it King George's men or our enemies, fight for yourselves.

Claire: God wants him to have the surgery, but the masochist is refusing the ether.
Tom: Masochist?
Claire: Well, it's a word for people who prefer to suffer pain.

Jamie: What does it mean, Sessanach?
Claire: It's starting. The storm, the war. It's almost here.

You're the only one who can show your son what a useless man like you can achieve and how proud he can make his father. Ye dinna ken, but it's you, not what you do or give or provide. It's you we need to come home.

Jamie

Claire: Is Tom afraid of women? Or was he just afraid of sinning, I suppose? He seemed so uncomfortable with me touching his hand or touching him at all, really.
Jamie: I was like that too, after Ardsmuir. It was shocking to be touched, especially by a woman.

Tom: Your hair. There's a great deal of it.
Claire: There is a great deal of it.
Tom: Eh.

Tom: Why do you never wear a proper kerch or cap?
Claire: Why should I?
Tom: 'Cause every pious married woman should. "And every woman who prayeth or prophesieth with her head uncovered dishonoreth her head. For that is just as if she were shaven."
Claire: Are we back to Saint Paul again? Ever occur to you that man had quite the bee in his bonnet about women? Besides, I'm not praying right now. I want to see how this does overnight before I risk prophesying about it.

Claire: What would you have done if they had chosen the poker?
Jamie: I would have let them have their punishment.
Claire: I hope they go home and tell their parents.
Jamie: Aye. On the other hand, if their parents think he's demon-born, and I'm his grand-sire and you're his granny, what doest that say about us?
Lionel [in Claire's head]: It says you're of the devil yourself.

Fergus: I am the man of this house!
Marsali: Well, then you can come back when you're actin' like one. You promised me, Fergus Fraser! And I will have a whole man or none at all.

Fergus: You're right. Only I wasn't drunk when I failed you before.
Marsali: I can fight for us, too. The burden is not only on you. I can protect us, as well.
Fergus: Not against men like Lionel Brown.
Marsali: Aye, I can. And I did. [long pause] Let this be a comfort to ye, Fergus because I mean it to be. Lionel didn't die. I killed him.

Marsali: So, please, Fergus. Tell me how to help you.
Fergus: You can't. I'm the one who is supposed to provide for you and the children, to protect you and the children.
Marsali: Then thank God Henri-Christian with me this evening and that he drinks his mother's milk.
Fergus: What does that mean?! You think I'd let any harm come to him?
Marsali: Well, it's a fine job ye'd do in that state. You can't protect anyone when you're drunk!

Outlander Season 6 Quotes

The name Lucifer brings to mind the burning fires of hell. Are you going to use the phosphorous to light the fire?

Malva

Tom: Is there a schoolhouse on the ridge?
Roger: No, not yet. But we do intend to build one. For now, I've been teachin' the wee lad his letters.
Tom: As long as there's a church. A man must surely build a house for God before building a home for himself.
Roger: Aye, well, we don't have a church yet, either. But that sounds like something my father would have said. He was a minister. Of course, he was Presbyterian. My side of the family was Protestant.
Tom: I'm not Catholic. There were some of us at Ardsmuir who merely wanted Scotland's interests best served rather than the Pope's.