"If I dropped a tear upon your hand, may it wither it up! If I spoke a gentle word in your hearing, may it deafen you! If I touched you with my lips, may the touch be poison to you! A curse upon this roof that gave me shelter! Sorrow and shame upon your head! Ruin upon all belonging to you!"
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Dombey and Son by Charles Dickens
The great commander, who seemed by expression of his visage to be always on the look-out for something in the extremest distance, and to have no ocular knowledge of anything within ten miles, made no reply whatever.
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Dombey and Son by Charles Dickens
She indulged in melancholy - that cheapest and most accessible of luxuries.
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Dombey and Son by Charles Dickens
"There is no wealth," she went on, turning paler as she watched him, while her eyes grew yet more lustrous in their earnestness, "that could buy these words of me, and the meaning that belongs to them. Once cast away as idle breath, no wealth or power can bring them back. I mean them; I have weighed them; and I will be true to what I undertake."
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Dombey and Son by Charles Dickens
A dangerous quality, if real; and a not less dangerous one, if feigned.
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Dombey and Son by Charles Dickens
With a fierce action of her hand, as if she sprinkled hatred on the ground, and with it devoted those who were standing there to destruction, she looked up once at the black sky, and strode out into the wild night.
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Dombey and Son by Charles Dickens
In particular, there was a butler in a blue coat and bright buttons, who gave quite a winey flavour to the table beer; he poured it out so superbly.
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Dombey and Son by Charles Dickens
It is when our budding hopes are nipped beyond recovery by some rough wind, that we are the most disposed to picture to ourselves what flowers they might have borne, if they had flourished.
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Dombey and Son by Charles Dickens
"For not an orphan in the wide world can be so deserted as the child who is an outcast from a living parent's love."
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Dombey and Son by Charles Dickens
It being a part of Mrs. Pipchin's system not to encourage a child's mind to develop and expand itself like a young flower, but to open it by force like an oyster.
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Dombey and Son by Charles Dickens
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