Stoker Quotes
Collection of top 100 famous quotes about Stoker
Stoker Quotes & Sayings
Happy to read and share the best inspirational Stoker quotes, sayings and quotations on Wise Famous Quotes.
Enter freely and of your own free will!
— Bram Stoker
You yourself never loved; you never love!
Yes, I too can love; you yourselves can tell it from the past. Is it not so? — Bram Stoker
Yes, I too can love; you yourselves can tell it from the past. Is it not so? — Bram Stoker
Great communicators exemplify the power that building relationships, creating respect and achieving results can have.
— John Stoker
Man cannot be trusted unless they are watched
— Bram Stoker
Whilst I live on here there is but one thing to hope for, that I may not go mad, if, indeed, I be not mad already.
— Bram Stoker
Loneliness will sit over our roofs with brooding wings.
— Bram Stoker
It's better worth being late for a chance of winning you than being in time for any other girl in the world.
— Bram Stoker
You will not be content, I know, to remain in the dark. Nay, the end, the very end, may give you a gleam of peace.
— Bram Stoker
For the dead travel fast.
— Bram Stoker
31 October.
Still hurrying along. The day has come, — Bram Stoker
Still hurrying along. The day has come, — Bram Stoker
in many ways the UnDead are strong. He have always
— Bram Stoker
Truly there is no such thing as finality.
— Bram Stoker
Tell me about it dear; for there is nothing which interests you which will not be dear to me
— Bram Stoker
He had evidently forgotten all about the dark stranger,
— Bram Stoker
I promise. and as I said it I felt that from that instant a door had been shut between us.
— Bram Stoker
I bear messages which will make both your ears tingle.
— Bram Stoker
It is too great a strain for a woman to bear. I did not think so at first, but I know better now.
— Bram Stoker
She had been to a tea-party with an antediluvian monster, and that they had been waited on by up-to-date men-servants.
— Bram Stoker
A kitten, a nice, little, sleek playful kitten, that I can play with, and teach, and feed, and feed, and feed!
— Bram Stoker
I'm a hard nut to crack, and I take it standing up.
— Bram Stoker
I had heard that madmen have unnatural strength. And as I knew I was a madman, at times anyhow, I resolved to use my power.
— Bram Stoker
For it is in the arcana of dreams that existences merge and renew themselves, change and yet keep the same.
— Bram Stoker
He means to succeed, and a man who has centuries before him can afford to wait and to go slow.
— Bram Stoker
The Dead travel fast.
— Bram Stoker
I go no further than to say that she might be UnDead.
— Bram Stoker
My dearest Mina, Oceans of love and millions of kisses,
— Bram Stoker
I do not, as you know, take sufficient interest in dress to be able to describe the new fashions. Dress is a bore.
— Bram Stoker
There are mysteries which men can only guess at, which age by age they may solve only in part.
— Bram Stoker
Chasing an errant swarm of bees is nothing to following a naked lunatic when the fit of escaping is upon him!
— Bram Stoker
Feeling as though my own brain were unhinged or as if the shock had
come which must end in its undoing, — Bram Stoker
come which must end in its undoing, — Bram Stoker
The man is an undeveloped homicidal maniac.
— Bram Stoker
Passed to my room and went to bed, and, strange to say, slept without dreaming. Despair has its own calms. 31
— Bram Stoker
When Mrs. Harker came in to see me this afternoon she wasn't the same. It was like tea after the teapot has been watered.
— Bram Stoker
And then he cried, till he laughed again, and laughed and cried together, just as a woman does. I
— 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
DRACULA A Mystery Story by Bram Stoker
— Bram Stoker
All I could see was the warm grey of quickening sky.
— Bram Stoker
I have a sort of empty feeling; nothing in the world seems of sufficient importance to be worth the doing.
— Bram Stoker
We've all become god's madmen, all of us.
— Bram Stoker
Take me away from all this Death.
— 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
I went to a French school, so we didn't study Bram Stoker there. I just thought it was a genius thing.
— Oliver Jackson-Cohen
May I cut off the head of dead Miss Lucy?
— Bram Stoker
I have crossed oceans of time to find you.
— Bram Stoker
Sleep has no place it can call its own.
— Bram Stoker
I want to cut off her head and take out her heart.
— Bram Stoker
There is hardly a foot of soil in all this region that has not been enriched by the blood of men, patriots or invaders.
— Bram Stoker
Water sleeps, and the enemy is sleepless.
— Bram Stoker
Love is, after all, a selfish thing; and it throws a black shadow on anything between which and the light it stands.
— Bram Stoker
the diary of a doctor who
— Bram Stoker
Most of us are so focused on what we are thinking that we miss most of what goes on in our conversations.
— John Stoker
There is a reason why all things are as they are.
— Bram Stoker
[Bram Stoker] wrote in his diary: Must be President some day. A man you can't cajole, can't frighten, can't buy.
— Edmund Morris
The inscrutable laws of sex have so arranged that even a timid woman is not afraid of a fierce and haughty man.
— Bram Stoker
They were made by Miss Lucy!
— Bram Stoker
Secrets are like flowers buried under snow. Eventually they rise up and push through into the light.
— Dacre Stoker