"When I have come to you, at last (as I have always done), I have come topeace and happiness. I come home, now, like a tired traveller, and findsuch a ...

It is the custom on the stage in all good, murderous melodramas, to present the tragic and the comic scenes in as regular alternation as the layers of red and white in a side of streaky, well-cured bacon.
~ Charles Dickens ~












It is the custom on the stage in all good, murderous melodramas, to present the tragic and the comic...
Show MoreMore Charles Dickens quotes
"Have a heart that never hardens, and a temper that never tires, and a touch that never hurts.
"Our love had begun in folly, and ended in madness!
"Best and happiest of all, the Time before him was his own, to make amends in!‘I will live in the Past, the Present, and the Future!’ Scrooge repeated,...
"There are many things from which I might have derived good, by which I have not profited, I dare say," returned the nephew. "Christmas among the rest....
"Good for Christmas-time is the ruddy colour of the cloak in which--the tree making a forest of itself for her to trip through, with her basket--Little...
"A day wasted on others is not wasted on one's self.
"I care for no man on earth, and no man on earth cares for me.
"He gave it its present name, and lived here shut up: day and night poring over the wicked heaps of papers in the suit, and hoping against hope to dise...
"My impression is, after many years of consideration, that there never can have been anybody in the world who played worse.
"My father had left a small collection of books in a little room upstairs, to which I had access (for it adjoined my own) and which nobody else in our ...
"To have all those noble Romans alive before me, and walking in and out for my entertainment, instead of being the stern taskmasters they had been at s...
"A man would die tonight of lying out on the marshes, I thought. And then I looked at the stars, and considered how awful it would be for a man to turn...
"In a word, it was impossible for me to separate her, in the past or in the present, from the innermost life of my life.
"To do a great right, you may do a little wrong; and you may take any means which the end to be attained will justify.