INJURY in Classic Quotes

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Quotes from Great Expectations by Charles Dickens
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 Current Search - injury in Great Expectations
1  By degrees it became an enormous injury to me that he stood before the fire.
Great Expectations By Charles Dickens
ContextHighlight   In Chapter XLIII
2  There was an air of utter loneliness upon her, that would have moved me to pity though she had wilfully done me a deeper injury than I could charge her with.
Great Expectations By Charles Dickens
ContextHighlight   In Chapter XLIX
3  By the surgeon's directions, her bed was carried into that room and laid upon the great table, which happened to be well suited to the dressing of her injuries.
Great Expectations By Charles Dickens
ContextHighlight   In Chapter XLIX
4  Miss Havisham gives you to him, as the greatest slight and injury that could be done to the many far better men who admire you, and to the few who truly love you.
Great Expectations By Charles Dickens
ContextHighlight   In Chapter XLIV
5  As often as I was restless in the night, and that was every quarter of an hour, I reflected what an unkindness, what an injury, what an injustice, Biddy had done me.
Great Expectations By Charles Dickens
ContextHighlight   In Chapter XXXV
6  Bentley Drummle, who was so sulky a fellow that he even took up a book as if its writer had done him an injury, did not take up an acquaintance in a more agreeable spirit.
Great Expectations By Charles Dickens
ContextHighlight   In Chapter XXV
7  He always slouched, locomotively, with his eyes on the ground; and, when accosted or otherwise required to raise them, he looked up in a half-resentful, half-puzzled way, as though the only thought he ever had was, that it was rather an odd and injurious fact that he should never be thinking.
Great Expectations By Charles Dickens
ContextHighlight   In Chapter XV