DYING in Classic Quotes

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Quotes from Dracula by Bram Stoker
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 Current Search - dying in Dracula
1  She wants blood, and blood she must have or die.
Dracula By Bram Stoker
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER X
2  Shortly afterwards, I heard the cracking of their whips die away in the distance.
Dracula By Bram Stoker
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER IV
3  It was better to die like a man; to die like a sailor in blue water no man can object.
Dracula By Bram Stoker
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER VII
4  So I said farewell to Mina, a parting which neither of us shall forget to our dying day; and we set out.
Dracula By Bram Stoker
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XXII
5  I feel I am dying of weakness, and have barely strength to write, but it must be done if I die in the doing.
Dracula By Bram Stoker
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XI
6  I feel I am dying of weakness, and have barely strength to write, but it must be done if I die in the doing.
Dracula By Bram Stoker
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XI
7  Then there came the sound of many feet tramping and dying away in some passage which sent up a clanging echo.
Dracula By Bram Stoker
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER IV
8  She has not told Lucy, and made me promise secrecy; her doctor told her that within a few months, at most, she must die, for her heart is weakening.
Dracula By Bram Stoker
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER VIII
9  When we were alone and had heard the last of the footsteps die out up the road, we silently, and as if by ordered intention, followed the Professor to the tomb.
Dracula By Bram Stoker
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XVI
10  Be careful with him always that there may be nothing to excite him of this kind for a long time to come; the traces of such an illness as his do not lightly die away.
Dracula By Bram Stoker
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER VIII
11  I see the lights scattered all over the town, sometimes in rows where the streets are, and sometimes singly; they run right up the Esk and die away in the curve of the valley.
Dracula By Bram Stoker
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER VI
12  They say that people who are near death die generally at the change to the dawn or at the turn of the tide; any one who has when tired, and tied as it were to his post, experienced this change in the atmosphere can well believe it.
Dracula By Bram Stoker
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER II
13  Van Helsing, Art, and I moved forward to Mrs. Harker, who by this time had drawn her breath and with it had given a scream so wild, so ear-piercing, so despairing that it seems to me now that it will ring in my ears till my dying day.
Dracula By Bram Stoker
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XXI
14  Here, too, when they came, they found the Huns, whose warlike fury had swept the earth like a living flame, till the dying peoples held that in their veins ran the blood of those old witches, who, expelled from Scythia had mated with the devils in the desert.
Dracula By Bram Stoker
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER III
15  When they become such, there comes with the change the curse of immortality; they cannot die, but must go on age after age adding new victims and multiplying the evils of the world; for all that die from the preying of the Un-Dead becomes themselves Un-Dead, and prey on their kind.
Dracula By Bram Stoker
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XVI
16  Friend Arthur, if you had met that kiss which you know of before poor Lucy die; or again, last night when you open your arms to her, you would in time, when you had died, have become nosferatu, as they call it in Eastern Europe, and would all time make more of those Un-Deads that so have fill us with horror.
Dracula By Bram Stoker
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XVI
17  Whilst asleep she looked stronger, although more haggard, and her breathing was softer; her open mouth showed the pale gums drawn back from the teeth, which thus looked positively longer and sharper than usual; when she woke the softness of her eyes evidently changed the expression, for she looked her own self, although a dying one.
Dracula By Bram Stoker
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XII
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