HAUNT in Classic Quotes

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Quotes from Great Expectations by Charles Dickens
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 Current Search - haunt in Great Expectations
1  A thousand Miss Havishams haunted me.
Great Expectations By Charles Dickens
ContextHighlight   In Chapter XXXVIII
2  The figure of my sister in her chair by the kitchen fire, haunted me night and day.
Great Expectations By Charles Dickens
ContextHighlight   In Chapter XXXV
3  Once received, it is a haunting idea; how many undesigning persons I suspected of watching me, it would be hard to calculate.
Great Expectations By Charles Dickens
ContextHighlight   In Chapter XLVI
4  I was usually at Hammersmith about half the week, and when I was at Hammersmith I haunted Richmond, whereof separately by and by.
Great Expectations By Charles Dickens
ContextHighlight   In Chapter XXXIV
5  If that staid old house near the Green at Richmond should ever come to be haunted when I am dead, it will be haunted, surely, by my ghost.
Great Expectations By Charles Dickens
ContextHighlight   In Chapter XXXVIII
6  I was haunted by the fear that she would, sooner or later, find me out, with a black face and hands, doing the coarsest part of my work, and would exult over me and despise me.
Great Expectations By Charles Dickens
ContextHighlight   In Chapter XIV
7  Not that its arrival brought me either; for, then I was worse than ever, and began haunting the coach-office in Wood Street, Cheapside, before the coach had left the Blue Boar in our town.
Great Expectations By Charles Dickens
ContextHighlight   In Chapter XXXII
8  Every hour so increased my abhorrence of him, that I even think I might have yielded to this impulse in the first agonies of being so haunted, notwithstanding all he had done for me and the risk he ran, but for the knowledge that Herbert must soon come back.
Great Expectations By Charles Dickens
ContextHighlight   In Chapter XL