| Quote | Author | Source | Email Quote |
|---|
| Is he mad? Anyway there's something on his mind, as sure as there must be something on a deck when it cracks. | Herman Melville | Moby Dick |  |
| " . . . my intellect is a little way upon the wrong side of that narrow boundary-line between sanity and insanity." | Mary Elizabeth Braddon | Lady Audley's Secret |  |
| "To let the brain work without sufficient material is like racing an engine. It racks itself to pieces." | Sir Arthur Conan Doyle | The Adventure of the Devil's Foot |  |
| Insanity is often the logic of an accurate mind overtasked. Good mental machinery ought to break its own wheels and levers, if anything is thrust among them suddenly which tends to stop them or reverse their motion. A weak mind does not accumulate force enough to hurt itself; stupidity often saves a man from going mad. | Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr. | The Autocrat of the Breakfast Table |  |
| When such men, who are beyond hope and fear, begin in their dim minds to see the source their woes, it may be an evil time for those who have wronged them. The weak man becomes strong when he has nothing, for then only can he feel the wild, mad thrill of despair. | Sir Arthur Conan Doyle | The White Company |  |
| "'Tis mad idolatry to make the service greater than the god . . . " | William Shakespeare | Troilus and Cressida |  |
| "How does the world go? I'll tell you what," he added, in a lower tone, "I shouldn't wish it to be mentioned, but it's a -" here he beckoned to me, and put his lips close to my ear - "it's a mad world. Mad as Bedlam, boy!" said Mr. Dick, taking snuff from a round box on the table, and laughing heartily. | Charles Dickens | David Copperfield |  |
| "The horrid mystery hanging over us in this house gets into my head like liquor, and makes me wild." | Wilkie Collins | The Moonstone |  |
| Was I to believe him in earnest in his intention to penetrate to the centre of this massive globe? Had I been listening to the mad speculations of a lunatic, or to the scientific conclusions of a lofty genius? Where did truth stop? Where did error begin? | Jules Verne | Journey to the Center of the Earth |  |
| "Madness in great ones must not unwatch'd go." | William Shakespeare | Hamlet, Prince of Denmark |  |