Uncle Silas Quotes
Uncle Silas
by
J. Sheridan Le Fanu7,151 ratings, 3.74 average rating, 669 reviews
Uncle Silas Quotes
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“The stream of life is black and angry; how so many of us get across without drowning, I often wonder. The best way is not to look too far before-just from one stepping-stone to another; and though you may wet your feet, He won't let you drown-He has not allowed me.”
― Uncle Silas
― Uncle Silas
“Perhaps other souls than human are sometimes born into the world, and clothed in flesh.”
― Uncle Silas
― Uncle Silas
“Knowledge is power-and power of one sort or another is the secret lust of human souls; and here is, beside the sense of exploration, the undefinable interest of a story, and above all, something forbidden, to stimulate the contumacious appetite.”
― Uncle Silas
― Uncle Silas
“The mind is a different organ by night and by day.”
― Uncle Silas
― Uncle Silas
“The air was still. The silvery vapour hung serenely on the far horizon, and the frosty stars blinked brightly. Everyone knows the effect of such a scene on a mind already saddened. Fancies and regrets float mistily in the dream, and the scene affects us with a strange mixture of memory and anticipation, like some sweet old air heard in the distance.”
― Uncle Silas
― Uncle Silas
“See how a sleepy child will put off the inevitable departure for bed. The little creature's eyes blink and stare, and it needs constant jogging to prevent his nodding off into the slumber which nature craves. His waking is a pain; he is quite worn out, and peevish, and stupid, and yet he implores a respite, and deprecates repose, and vows he is not sleepy, even to the moment when his mother takes him in her arms, and carries him, in a sweet slumber, to the nursery. So it is with us old children of earth and the great sleep of death, and nature our kind mother.”
― Uncle Silas
― Uncle Silas
“The world," he resumed after a short pause, "has no faith in any man's conversion; it never forgets what he was, it never believes him anything better, it is an inexorable and stupid judge.”
― Uncle Silas
― Uncle Silas
“How marvellously lie our anxieties, in filmy layers, one over the other! Take away that which has lain on the upper surface for so long—the care of cares—the only one, as it seemed to you, between your soul and the radiance of Heaven—and straight you find a new stratum there. As physical science tells us no fluid is without its skin, so does it seem with this fine medium of the soul, and these successive films of care that form upon its surface on mere contact with the upper air and light.”
― Uncle Silas
― Uncle Silas
“Have not women preferred hatred to indifference, and the reputation of witchcraft, with all its penalties, to absolute insignificance?”
― Uncle Silas
― Uncle Silas
“I am afraid we women are factionists; we always take a side, and nature has formed us for advocates rather than judges.”
― Uncle Silas
― Uncle Silas
“You have zeal - have you nerve?”
― Uncle Silas
― Uncle Silas
“smuggled away in whispers, by black familiars, unresisting, the beloved one leaves home, without a farewell, to darken those doors no more; henceforward to lie outside, far away, and forsaken, through the drowsy heats of summer, through days of snow and nights of tempest, without light or warmth, without a voice near. Oh, Death, king of terrors! The body quakes and the spirit faints before thee. It is vain, with hands clasped over our eyes, to scream our reclamation; the horrible image will not be excluded. We have just the word spoken eighteen hundred years ago, and our trembling faith. And through the broken vault the gleam of the Star of Bethlehem.”
― Uncle Silas
― Uncle Silas
“It was now the stormy equinoctial weather that sounds the wild dirge of autumn, and marches the winter in. I love, and always did, that grand undefinable music, threatening and bewailing, with its strange soul of liberty and desolation.”
― Uncle Silas
― Uncle Silas
“You will do well to take advantage of Madame's short residence to get up your French a little... You will be glad of this, my dear, when you have reached France, where you will find they speak nothing else.”
― Uncle Silas
― Uncle Silas
“In my time first cousins did not meet like strangers. But we are learning modesty from the Americans, and old English ways are too gross for us.”
― Uncle Silas
― Uncle Silas
“Jusging by the sour glance she threw on me as she said this, I concluded that I represented those 'late changes' to which all the sorrows of the house were referred. I felt unhappy under the ill-will even of this odious old woman, being one of those unhappily constructed mortals who cannot be indifferent when they reasonably ought, and always yearn after kindness, even that of the worthless.”
― Uncle Silas
― Uncle Silas
“I have often wondered since at my own firmness. In that dreadful interview with my uncle I had felt, in the whirl and horror of my mind, on the very point of submitting, just as nervous people are said to throw themselves over precipices through sheer dread of falling.”
― Uncle Silas
― Uncle Silas
“I never could quite understand why these Jezebels like to insinuate the dreadful truth against themselves; but they do. Is it the spirit of feminine triumph overcoming feminine shame, and making them vaunt their fall as an evidence of bygone fascination and existing power? Need we wonder? Have not women preferred hatred to indifference, and the reputation of witchcraft, with all its penalties, to absolute insignificance? Thus, as they enjoyed the fear inspired among simple neighbours by their imagined traffic with the father of ill, did Madame, I think, relish with a cynical vainglory the suspicion of her satanic superiority. Next”
― Uncle Silas
― Uncle Silas
“I treated her as if she had human sympathies, in the hope that they might be generated somehow.”
― Uncle Silas
― Uncle Silas
“No one is ever too old to do a foolish thing.”
― Uncle Silas
― Uncle Silas
“Truth, like murder, will out some day.”
― Uncle Silas
― Uncle Silas
“I had first thought of Milly's absurdities, to which, in description, I cannot do justice, simply because so many details have, by distance of time, escaped my recollection. But her ways and her talk were so indescribably grotesque that she made me again and again quiver with suppressed laughter. But there was a pitiable and even a melancholy meaning underlying the burlesque. This creature, with no more education than a dairy-maid, I gradually discovered had fine natural aptitudes for accomplishment - a very sweet voice, and wonderfully delicate ear, and a talent for drawing which quite threw mine into the shade. It was really astonishing.”
― Uncle Silas
― Uncle Silas
“(...) and I tell you, Austin Ruthyn, if you won't look about and marry somebody, somebody may possibly marry you.”
― Uncle Silas
― Uncle Silas
“Everyone has enemy; you will learn all that so soon as you are little older, and without cause she is mine”
― Uncle Silas
― Uncle Silas
“Why should this dreadful woman’s thoughts be running so continually upon my father’s will? How could it concern her?”
― Uncle Silas
― Uncle Silas
