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Nature in one of her beneficent moods has ordained that even death has some antidote to its own terrors.
Bram Stoker
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Bram Stoker
Age: 64 †
Born: 1847
Born: November 8
Died: 1912
Died: April 20
Clerk
Journalist
Novelist
Screenwriter
Theatre Critic
Theatre Manager
Writer
Clontarf
Ireland
Abraham Stoker
Nature
Beneficent
Even
Terrors
Ordained
Moods
Antidote
Mood
Terror
Death
More quotes by Bram Stoker
I am longing to be with you, and by the sea, where we can talk together freely and build our castles in the air.
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A brave man's hand can speak for itself, it does not even need a woman's love to hear its music.
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Yes, there is some one I love, though he has not told me yet that he even loves me.
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No man knows till he has suffered from the night how sweet and dear to his heart and eye the morning can be.
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But hush! No telling to others that make so inquisitive questions. We must obey, and silence is a part of obedience, and obedience is to bring you strong and well into loving arms that wait for you.
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But a stranger in a strange land, he is no one. Men know him not, and to know not is to care not for.
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I will not let you go into the unknown alone.
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I have always thought that a wild animal never looks so well as when some obstacle of pronounced durability is between us. A personal experience has intensified rather than diminished that idea.
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The only beautiful thing in the world whose beauty lasts for ever is a pure, fair soul.
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We are in Transylvania, and Transylvania is not England. Our ways are not your ways, and there shall be to you many strange things. Nay, from what you have told me of your experiences already, you know something of what strange things there may be.
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Take me away from all this Death.
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It is ever thus that the things which we do wrong - although they may seem little at the time, and though from the hardness of our hearts we pass them lightly by - come back to us with bitterness.
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It is only when a man feels himself face to face with such horrors that he can understand their true import.
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He may not enter anywhere at the first, unless there be some one of the household who bid him to come, though afterwards he can come as he please.
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I stood beside Van Helsing, and said- Ah, well, poor girl, there is peace for her at last. It is the end! He turned to me, and said with grave solemnity:- Not so alas! not so. It is only the beginning!
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Though sympathy alone can't alter facts, it can help to make them more bearable.
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Never did tombs look so ghastly white. Never did cypress, or yew, or juniper so seem the embodiment of funeral gloom. Never did tree or grass wave or rustle so ominously. Never did bough creak so mysteriously, and never did the far-away howling of dogs send such a woeful presage through the night.
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I have a sort of empty feeling nothing in the world seems of sufficient importance to be worth the doing.
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I suppose that we women are such cowards that we think a man will save us from fears, and we marry him.
Bram Stoker
I want you to believe...to believe in things that you cannot.
Bram Stoker