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.
And, too, it made me think of the wonderful power of money! What can it not do when it is properly applied; and what might it do when basely used.
— Bram Stoker
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
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.
— Bram Stoker
Man cannot be trusted unless they are watched
— Bram Stoker
There is a method in his madness, and the rudimentary idea in my mind is growing. It will be a whole idea soon, and then, oh, unconscious cerebration.
— 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
We Szekelys have a right to be proud, for in our veins flows the blood of many brave races who fought as the lion fights, for lordship.
— Bram Stoker
R.E.A.L. conversation: Recognize judgments. Express thoughts neutrally. Ask questions. Listen for verbal & non-verbal messages.
— John 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
His very heart was bleeding, and it took all the manhood of him, and there was a royal lot of it, too, to keep him from breaking down.
— 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
I am getting quite uneasy about him, though why I should I do not know, but I do wish that he would write, if it were only a single line
— 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
...the passing gleams of the moonlight between the scudding clouds crossing and passing, [are] like the gladness and sorrow of a man's life.
— 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
When I came in he threw himself on his knees before me and implored me to let him have a cat; that his salvation depended upon it.
— 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
My only doubt was as to whether any dream could be more terrible than the unnatural, horrible net of gloom and mystery which seemed closing around me.
— Bram Stoker
Authority - when abused through micromanagement, intimidation, or verbal or nonverbal threats - makes people shut down & productivity ceases.
— John 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
The devils at once, it matters not. We must fight him all the same. He went to the hall door for his bag, and together we went up to Lucy's room.
— 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
And the young do not tell themselves to the young, but to the old, like me, who have known so many sorrows and the causes of them.
— 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
I felt that it was getting very late indeed, but I did not say anything, for I felt under obligation to meet my host's wishes in ever way.
— Bram Stoker
Take me away from all this Death.
— Bram Stoker
It may be ordained that we have many nights and days to follow, if full of peril, but we must go on, and from no danger shall we shrink.
— 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
Awareness is about improving social intelligence. If you can't see, hear, or feel the dynamics of a conversation, you can't manage them.
— John 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
And yet, unless my senses deceive me, the old centuries had, and have, powers of their own which mere "modernity" cannot kill. Later:
— 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
It seems to me that the further East you go the more unpunctual are the trains. What ought they to be in China? - Jonathan Harker
— Bram Stoker
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