- John: My people, we don't carry on like you do. We don't hate and destroy each other. We make love for fun. Yes, it is a game, and we play it when we get time off from work. But we don't have all day and all night like you people do!
- Miss Julie: Have you ever been in love?
- John: [rigorously polishing a boot] We don't use that word. But I have liked a lot of girls. And once when I could not have one girl I wanted, I became sick, horribly sick. Sick like a prince in a fairy tale, a prince who cannot eat or drink because of love.
- Miss Julie: Who was it?
- John: It was you.
- Miss Julie: Are you ever afraid to hear that you're no longer wanted? That you don't belong?
- John: I shared a bed with my little brother, and one morning, when I was eight, I woke up and found him dead beside me. I saw death for the first time and yes, I was afraid. But not in the way you're talking about.
- Miss Julie: On the other side of that wall, I have a place. A secret garden. There is no wind there. I go there when I'm anxious. I'm anxious all the time. I'm always longing for some other place. You cannot imagine how different I want my life to be.
- John: You and me.
- Miss Julie: Yes, we must leave.
- John: To make life hell for each other?
- Miss Julie: No. To be happy, smile on the inside. Enjoy ourselves a few years, as long as we can, and then... to die. Would you die with me?
- [first lines]
- Little Miss Julie: [reading] She had received a most beautiful doll as a present. Oh, what a glorious doll, so fair and delicate. She did not seem created for the sorrows of this world.
- [last lines]
- Miss Julie: [throwing flowers into the creek] I'm sending you out into the world. Look. You're like bright-colored stars. The water is your heaven. Do you know that, my flowers? Yes. Everything is so much bigger than the little pieces. Do you know that?
- Kathleen: God is no respecter of status, except the last shall be first.
- Miss Julie: So He helps the last then?
- Kathleen: And it is easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter the Kingdom of Heaven. So you see, Miss Julie, it's just the way it is.
- Kathleen: Miss Julie thinks it's pregnant again, because she's been, ah, you know, close to the gamekeeper's dog. Miss Julie told me she watched them and it made her sick. And now she'd rather risk the dog die from the remedy than have a mixed breed. God save her.
- Miss Julie: Sometimes I dream that I'm on top of a column and I can't get down. I'm almost fainting when I look down, but I must get down. I'm so scared to fall. I can no longer hold on and I long to fall. But I don't fall. Yet there's no peace, no rest till I come down. I would be descending. I would fall. And if I reach the ground, I want to go further down. Deep into the earth itself. Did you ever feel this?
- John: No, no, I - I dream that I am lying under a tall tree in a dark forest and - I want to go up, up to the top, and look around at the bright landscape where the sun is shining and so I can rob the nest in which lies the golden eggs. And I climb and climb. But the trunk is so thick and so slippery, and it is so far to the first branch. But I know that if I can only reach that first branch, then I would easily reach the top. I haven't reached it yet - that first branch - but I will, if it only be in my dreams.
- John: That's the life - always new faces, never a moment to spare for worry and nerves, no need to wonder what to do with yourself, people dancin' night and day, trains whistlin', and all the time the jingle of gold coins. That's the life, Julie. Oh, eternal summer, orange trees, laurels.
- Miss Julie: Tell me you love me. Otherwise I am nothing.
- John: Not now, not here. And above all, it's important - no feelings. Then everything will be lost. Cold blood, clear heads, grown-up people.
- John: It hurts like watching the last flowers of autumn hanging their heads, already faded or torn to shreds by the rain and turned into muck.
- John: Oh, I cannot deny that it has given me pleasure to discover that what has dazzled us below you was only gaudiness, that there is powder under tender cheek, that there is grime under your dirty nails, that your perfumed handkerchief is dirty, Julie. Oh, it hurts me to realize that what I yearned to reach is so far from genuine. It's nothing. It's worthless!
- John: Miss Julie, you are a wonderful woman, and you're far too good for one like me. You've been drinking. You lost your head. And now you're trying to cover up your mistake by telling yourself that you love me. Well, you don't. Unless my looks may have tempted you. And maybe there was a physical attraction. But that makes your love no better than mine. I could be your pet, like your dog that you give affection when it suits you, but that's not enough for me. I can never make you love me.
- Miss Julie: Are you so sure?
- John: Are you meaning to say that it might be possible?
- John: Go. Get up there.
- Miss Julie: Speak kindly to me.
- John: Orders always sound unkind. Now you know what it feels like. Go.
- John: Oh, you - the fire you ignite in a man isn't likely to go out. You are like hot spices with one of your kisses.
- Miss Julie: I need you to understand me, to see me.
- John: Don't give me the secrets of your life. You'll regret it.
- Miss Julie: I see silver and gold - and all the stars. Just like when I went to sleep as a child. I'm floating out of the window and up to the sky. Such freedom, surrounded by sparkling crystal. And the dark is no longer dark. The whole room is warm and safe like an open fire. It's you. And I am close to the fire. How nice and warm it is. And it is so quiet and so light.
- John: Perhaps there isn't quite as much difference as they think between human beings and human beings.
- Miss Julie: I have chosen to forget all rank and so must you. Come, give me your arm. Thank you, John. I really don't want to treat you as an inferior.
- John: She's elegant - Miss Julie - magnificent. Oh, her waist, her neck.
- Kathleen: Stop it. I've heard Clara talkin'. She's seen her - naked - lots of times when she gives her a bath.
- John: Oh, Clara, too cross-eyed to get anything right. You women, you're always jealous of each other. Listen, I, who have been out riding with her - I know her well enough - the way she sits a horse, her legs, and then the way she dances.
- John: You are strange.
- Miss Julie: So are you. Life is strange, people - everything. We're just foam floating on water until we sink.
- Miss Julie: Toast me.
- [John freezes]
- Miss Julie: Are you bashful?
- John: To your health, Miss Julie.
- Miss Julie: Bravo. Now kiss my shoe.
- Miss Julie: Shall we go and pick some lilacs?
- John: I can't do that. Absolutely not.
- Miss Julie: I order you.
- Miss Julie: I think she's snoring.
- John: She doesn't. But she talks in her sleep.
- Miss Julie: How would you know?
- John: We've been doin' what everyone is doin'. It is Midsummer Night, Miss Julie. Between midnight and dawn, lovers are allowed to open their hearts and their loins.