TIMES in Classic Quotes

Simple words can express big ideas - learn how great writers to make beautiful sentences with common words.
Quotes from Dracula by Bram Stoker
Stories of USA Today
Materials for Reading & Listening Practice
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 Current Search - times in Dracula
1  Only at certain times can he have limited freedom.
Dracula By Bram Stoker
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XVIII
2  I rejoice also that there is a chapel of old times.
Dracula By Bram Stoker
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER II
3  At times I held the belief so strongly that I actually tried to take human life.
Dracula By Bram Stoker
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XVIII
4  This was repeated several times, with greater effort and with shorter pauses as the time moved on.
Dracula By Bram Stoker
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER X
5  They were a hundred times more terrible in the grim silence which held them than even when they howled.
Dracula By Bram Stoker
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER I
6  At times she slept, and both Van Helsing and I noticed the difference in her, between sleeping and waking.
Dracula By Bram Stoker
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XII
7  He is usually respectful to the attendant and at times servile; but to-night, the man tells me, he was quite haughty.
Dracula By Bram Stoker
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER VIII
8  His cries are at times awful, but the silences that follow are more deadly still, for he means murder in every turn and movement.
Dracula By Bram Stoker
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER VIII
9  Now, since I know it is all true, a hundred thousand times more do I know that he must pass through the bitter waters to reach the sweet.
Dracula By Bram Stoker
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XV
10  He looked so earnest over it that I shall never again think that a man must be playful always, and never earnest, because he is merry at times.
Dracula By Bram Stoker
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER V
11  We were right in principle, and ninety-nine times out of a hundred we should have proved, by the logic of events, the accuracy of our judgment.
Dracula By Bram Stoker
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XIII
12  She complains of difficulty in breathing satisfactorily at times, and of heavy, lethargic sleep, with dreams that frighten her, but regarding which she can remember nothing.
Dracula By Bram Stoker
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER IX
13  There was no possibility of making any mistake about this, for in the long hours that followed, she had many spells of sleeping and waking and repeated both actions many times.
Dracula By Bram Stoker
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XII
14  If I did simply follow my inclining I would do now, at this moment, what is to be done; but there are other things to follow, and things that are thousand times more difficult in that them we do not know.
Dracula By Bram Stoker
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XV
15  Here I am, sitting at a little oak table where in old times possibly some fair lady sat to pen, with much thought and many blushes, her ill-spelt love-letter, and writing in my diary in shorthand all that has happened since I closed it last.
Dracula By Bram Stoker
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER III
16  At times the mist cleared, and the sea for some distance could be seen in the glare of the lightning, which now came thick and fast, followed by such sudden peals of thunder that the whole sky overhead seemed trembling under the shock of the footsteps of the storm.
Dracula By Bram Stoker
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER VII
17  I have a dim half-remembrance of long, anxious times of waiting and fearing; darkness in which there was not even the pain of hope to make present distress more poignant: and then long spells of oblivion, and the rising back to life as a diver coming up through a great press of water.
Dracula By Bram Stoker
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XI
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