Bram Stoker's Dracula Best Quotes & Sayings
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Top Bram Stoker's Dracula Best Quotes
Bram Stoker's 'Dracula,' in my reading, is really obviously about disease and our relation to disease. — Eula Biss
I have been so long master
that I would be master still, or at least that none other
should be master of me. — Bram Stoker
I trust that your journey from London has been a happy one, and that you will enjoy your stay in my beautiful land.--Your friend, Dracula. — Bram Stoker
Walpurgis Night, when, according to the belief of millions of people, the devil was abroad - when the graves were opened and the dead came forth and walked. When all evil things of earth and air and water held revel. This very place the driver had specially shunned. This was the depopulated village of centuries ago. This was where the suicide lay; and this was the place where I was, alone - unmanned, shivering with cold in a shroud of snow with a wild storm gathering again upon me! It took all my philosophy, all the religion I had been taught, all my courage, not to collapse in a paroxysm of fright.
(Dracula's Guest) — Bram Stoker
Kim Newman brings Dracula back home in the granddaddy of all vampire adventures. Anno Dracula couldn't be more fun if Bram Stoker had scripted it for Hammer. It's a beautifully constructed Gothic epic that knocks almost every other vampire novel out for the count. — Christopher Fowler
There are vampires. They are real, they are of our time, and they are here, close by, stalking us as we sleep ... — Nicky Raven
The blood is the life! — Bram Stoker
Souls and memories can do strange things during trance. — Bram Stoker
There is a reason that all things are as they are, and did you see with my eyes and know with my knowledge, you would perhaps better understand. — Bram Stoker
Listen to them, the children of the night. What music they make! — Bram Stoker
The warlike days are over. Blood is too precious a thing in these days of dishonorable peace; and the glories of the great races are as a tale that is told. — Bram Stoker
Does that city create its citizens, or is the city only a dream of its citizens. — Bram Stoker
Despair has its own calms. — Bram Stoker
And then away for home! Away to the quickest and nearest train! Away from this cursed land, where the devil and his children stil walk with earthly feet! — Bram Stoker
the house which Dracula had bought was the very next one to my own. — Bram Stoker
No man knows till he experiences it, what it is like to feel his own life-blood drawn away into the woman he loves. — Bram Stoker
He bowed in a courtly way as he replied: I am Dracula. and I bid you welcome, Mr Harker, to my house. Come in; the night air is chill, and you must need to eat and rest. — Bram Stoker
If he should come this very night I'd not refuse to answer his call. For life be, after all, only a waitin' for somethin' else than what we're doin', and death be all that we can rightly depend on"
Excerpt From: Stoker, Bram. "Dracula." iBooks.
This material may be protected by copyright. — Bram Stoker
The last I saw of Count Dracula was his kissing his hand to me, with a red light of triumph in his eyes, and with a smile that Judas in hell might be proud of. — Bram Stoker
There was one great tomb more lordly than all the rest; huge it was, and nobly proportioned. On it was but one word, DRACULA. — Bram Stoker
Bram Stoker's 'Dracula' was a story about the fear of immigration; the bad old bloodsucker swooping in from Eastern Europe and also preying upon 'our' vulnerable women. — Victor LaValle
You might as well ask a man to eat molecules with a pair of chop-sticks, as to try to interest me, about the lesser carnivora, when I know of what is before me. — Bram Stoker
DRACULA A Mystery Story by Bram Stoker — Bram Stoker
How many of us begin a new record with each day of our lives? — Bram Stoker
I could see it under the heavy moustache, was fixed and rather cruel-looking, with peculiarly sharp white teeth; these protruded over the lips, whose remarkable ruddiness showed astonishing vitality in a man of his years. — Bram Stoker
God will act in His own way and time. Do not fear, and do not rejoice as yet; for what we wish for at the moment may be our undoings. - Van Helsing, Dracula — Bram Stoker
Do not think that I am not sad, though I laugh. — Bram Stoker
Even the great Van Helsing is not immune from these confusing and cloying vampiric attractions, 'the fascination of the wanton Un-dead' (p. 393). But destroy the vampires though he and the other men indeed do in the end, it is Mina who remains the most important enabling factor for the defeat of Dracula, with the aid, of course, of what she calls 'the wonderful power of money!' (p. 378). And the reason for this is her ambiguous sexuality. In her is to be found something — Bram Stoker