- Page 1: DraculaBy Bram StokerDownload free
- Page 11 and 12: The road was rugged, but still we s
- Page 13 and 14: the pine woods that seemed in the d
- Page 15: looking at his watch, said to the o
- Page 18 and 19: to keep them from bolting. In a few
- Page 20 and 21: its light I saw around us a ring of
- Page 22 and 23: Chapter 2Jonathan Harker’s Journa
- Page 24 and 25: open door. The old man motioned me
- Page 26 and 27: eady, and I do not sup.’I handed
- Page 28 and 29: ‘Listen to them, the children of
- Page 30 and 31: the Count entered. He saluted me in
- Page 32 and 33: tending not to understand, but gene
- Page 34 and 35: Jonathan, nay, pardon me. I fall in
- Page 36 and 37: gan to look at some of the books ar
- Page 38 and 39: I had cut myself slightly, but did
- Page 40 and 41: Chapter 3Jonathan Harker’s Journa
- Page 42 and 43: he warmed up to the subject wonderf
- Page 44 and 45: ants without a leader? Where ends t
- Page 46 and 47: the hands of one man, could have hi
- Page 48 and 49: ing as he wrote them to some books
- Page 50 and 51: the order of the rooms, that the wi
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ey lower down. From the windows I c
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in disobeying it. The sense of slee
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luptuousness which was both thrilli
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and they could not have passed me w
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was splintered. I could see that th
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do no more. I stole back to the stu
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was fastened on the outside.Then I
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striving to answer the call. I was
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Let me not think of it. Action!It h
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of old earth newly turned. As I wen
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‘Because, dear sir, my coachman a
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I threw open the door, and saw with
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lust for blood, and create a new an
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some of the gold with me, lest I wa
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ut it is really an exercise book. I
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now, though I have spoken, I would
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hands trembled, and then with some
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it didn’t seem half so hard to re
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Thank you for your sweet honesty to
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We’ve told yarns by the campfire
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scends so steeply over the harbour
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hundreds of them, I do not know how
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own. The whole thing be only lies.
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her comment very gravely and somewh
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times imagine he is only abnormally
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how his pets went on increasing in
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Sanderson’s physiology or Ferrier
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27 July.—No news from Jonathan. I
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I’ve been sayin’ about the dead
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Chapter 7CUTTING FROM ‘THE DAILYG
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made to signal her to reduce sail i
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away a schooner with all sails set,
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ity were either in bed or were out
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harbour in the storm.9 August.—Th
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oxes of earth. At noon set sail. Ea
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seen again. Men all in a panic of f
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him come out on deck again with a t
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present state, he would, I believe,
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its eyes savage, and all its hair b
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Lucy is asleep and breathing softly
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white. The coming of the cloud was
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we passed along, the gravel hurt my
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seemed, even in her sleep, to be a
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though the front of our part of the
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I shall insist on the doctor seeing
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say poor old Mr. Swales would have
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self not strong enough to write, th
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are too paltry for an Omnipotent Be
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the high wall which separates our g
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Chapter 9LETTER, MINA HARKER TO LUC
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what it is I feel my head spin roun
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I am. My dear, please Almighty God,
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He will only say, ‘I don’t take
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oom tonight. I shall make an excuse
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mother was present, and in a few se
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has, I believe, an absolutely open
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special article for THE DAILY TELEG
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hear from me.’DR. SEWARD’S DIAR
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foul clouds even as on foul water,
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Chapter 10LETTER, DR. SEWARD TO HON
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eached over and took my ear in his
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instant we had closed the door he s
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now and be silent. You shall kiss h
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He must not stay here. Hold a momen
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She did not in any way make objecti
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that nothing would induce any of yo
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here now. I have to call on you you
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the hall, asking the way to the nea
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ing, with half laughter, and half d
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Chapter 11LUCY WESTENRA’S DIARY12
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face, and saw it turn ashen gray. H
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LUCY WESTENRA’S DIARY17 September
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dinner, but I waits till they’ve
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he let me stroke his ears same as e
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northward faster than a horse could
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had fallen sadly into arrear. Sudde
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afraid, but I did wish that Dr. Sew
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side, a nightingale was singing. I
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Chapter 12DR. SEWARD’S DIARY18 Se
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gently, and entered the room.How sh
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Presently we both began to be consc
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got a terrible shock and it told on
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putting his finger to his lips, I g
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Quincey held out his hand. ‘Count
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everything.It is now nearly one o
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instead. Goodbye, my dearest Lucy,
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of us, pulling us to and fro as if
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is here that the grave shock that h
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out by the corner of the blind. The
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him back. ‘No,’ he whispered,
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ing of the heart, had gone to make
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lawyer as well as a doctor. But thi
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post-mortem knives.’‘Must we ma
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of death to go watch alone by the b
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understanding.He did not remain lon
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death had been preceded by any acut
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I have them all here. I took them b
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and asked him what it was that dist
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Oh, what a wealth of sorrow in a fe
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for that poor boy, that dear boy, s
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when the laugh arrived, if you coul
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pecially when very young, in and ar
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to go back to the bitter hours, asl
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anything of it to Mrs. Westenra. I
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le over it, but falls naturally bac
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to the light, and became so absorbe
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that I feel more than ever, and it
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case he is in a hurry.So he took th
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the room where he was, and introduc
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lour, and he grew quite white. He r
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hints given, not only by events, bu
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thing is here in London in the nine
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and placed his elbows on the table,
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truth, Byron excepted from the cate
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‘There is not hurry. It is more l
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and I drew back towards the door. B
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the tomb. The tomb itself was hidde
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over to Lucy’s coffin, and I foll
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Helsing called it, and to loathe it
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to watch in that churchyard. It ple
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‘Quincey and I talked it over, bu
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and for ever, the feet you love mus
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death can do her good even now, whe
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know that there was a leaden coffin
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like dough or putty. He crumbled th
- Page 302 and 303:
We shuddered with horror. I could s
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tern as Van Helsing held it down. C
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She seemed like a nightmare of Lucy
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the hand which would restore Lucy t
- Page 310 and 311:
struction was yielded as a privileg
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Chapter 17DR. SEWARD’S DIARY-cont
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Van Helsing left with me, though th
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ible story.!’Then it was terrible
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‘Because it is a part of the terr
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that if we get all of our material
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I found Renfield sitting placidly i
- Page 324 and 325:
gentleman ‘such like as like your
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however, done him good. He was neve
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the depth of them. If sympathy and
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comfort to so brave and unselfish a
- Page 332 and 333:
It was quite evident that he feared
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me questioningly as she began, to l
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her nerves, and in sleep, from her
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tained for me. So we then can discu
- Page 340 and 341:
‘I am with you,’ said Lord Goda
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in the mirror no reflect, as again
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He must, indeed, have been that Voi
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or we must, so to speak, sterilize
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ut none of the others at first said
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ment, if I may. Time presses, and i
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As, however, I got near the door, a
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Chapter 19JONATHAN HARKER’S JOURN
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which he laid on the step, sorting
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like old tattered rags as the weigh
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a face, but it was only the shadows
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when I had made my first visit. Nev
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have all overslept ourselves, for t
- Page 366 and 367:
a stool in the centre, with his elb
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does seems, no matter how right it
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and poured into the room. Then it o
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that he had something important to
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systematic manner in which this was
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her daily tasks to interest her, th
- Page 378 and 379:
of tea, and me a puffin’ an’ a
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had lately been taken, but he could
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took all my courage to hold to the
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own well-being, they form a more th
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saw that for the present it was use
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after all!’ After a pause he adde
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Has no dread of wanting ‘life’
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and looked in through the observati
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Chapter 21DR. SEWARD’S DIARY3 Oct
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The man withdrew, and we went into
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His words may be worth many lives.
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He was laughing with his red mouth,
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where they could hear better. They
- Page 404 and 405:
himself up from hands and knees. Wh
- Page 406 and 407:
He dipped the end of a towel in col
- Page 408 and 409:
come between us!’He put out his a
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flap westward. I expected to see hi
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struck him. For an instant my heart
- Page 414 and 415:
clear. Harker was still and quiet.
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passage if he had heard anything. H
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here some who would stand between y
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home is the longest way, so your pr
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he sell him that house, making an a
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might be able to cope with him then
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things of which we know, so that He
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We entered Carfax without trouble a
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you, and shall let you in.’‘The
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a stable, pointed to look like the
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utterly stamp him out. All through
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hour and already, if all be well, f
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had been consulting his pocketbook.
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tective impulse, holding the Crucif
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earth box, and we must try to find
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his destruction.’As she spoke I c
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dare not think of it even now. This
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He rubbed his hands as he said, ‘
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away into a deep breath as of one s
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Chapter 24DR. SEWARD’S PHONOGRAPH
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each time, the pain and the fear se
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for the ship. He give much talk to
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friend will have done his part. Whe
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istence would defame Him. He have a
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much for each and all of us. When w
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our hypnotic trance, tell what the
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‘Good!’ said Van Helsing, ‘Wi
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the scar. I saw that she was in ear
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He told them what Mina had said, an
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Chapter 25DR SEWARD’S DIARY11 Oct
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itter task to be done, is God’s w
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ing blush, and changed her phrase,
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‘the Odessus.’ The journey may
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isk. The owner gave him a paper tel
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whoever invented it.It is only abou
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‘Czarina Catherine reported enter
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John will stay with Madam Mina and
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and happy looking and, in the doing
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He went on, ‘Now you shall speak.
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you have as yet done in your times
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upwards, as if lifting a weight. Va
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thing is going out. I can feel it p
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and I called on Messrs. Mackenzie &
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get rid o’t althegither. We didn
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30 October, evening.—They were so
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living water would engulf him, help
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or the Sereth. I read in the typesc
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First, because you are young and br
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all over, ‘we are in the hands of
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ight bank, far enough off to get on
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hard, they would be about now at th
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will not be any chance of our being
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At sunset time he hypnotized me, an
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whisper to me that all is not well.
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then. But she is so bright and tend
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knowing her unavailingness. But I m
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I would soon have learned, for the
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DR. SEWARD’S DIARY5 November.—W
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a yearning for delay which seemed t
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John, hardly had my knife severed t
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on the top of the rock, and began t
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falling in such heavy flakes close
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ut only a wild, surging desire to d
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and every stone of its broken battl
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with our boy on his knee.‘We want