“I am all in a sea of wonders. I doubt; I fear; I think strange things, which I dare not confess to my own soul.”
Source: Dracula
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Bram Stoker 84
Irish novelist and short story writer, best known today for… 1847–1912Related quotes

“I am not so wonderful but that in the hour of my triumph I am frightened by my own littleness.”
Miramon, in Ch. IV : In the Doubtful Palace
Figures of Earth (1921)
Context: I am not so wonderful but that in the hour of my triumph I am frightened by my own littleness. Look you, Niafer, I had thought I would be changed when I had become a famous champion, but for all that I stand posturing here with this long sword, and am master of the hour and of the future, I remain the boy that last Thursday was tending pigs.

Of Bashfulness
Bartlett's Familiar Quotations, 10th ed. (1919)

Dialogues on Metaphysics (1688) Dialogue III
Context: I am unable, when I turn to myself, to recognize any of my faculties or my capacities. The inner sensation which I have of myself informs me that I am, that I think, that I will, that I have sensory awareness, that I suffer, and so on; but it provides me with no knowledge whatever of what I am — of the nature of my thought, my sensations, my passions, or my pain — or the mutual relations that obtain between all these things … I have no idea whatever of my soul.

Source: 1890s - 1910s, The Writings of a Savage (1996), p. xxvii: Quote from Le Sourire (Tahiti, August 1899)
Mister Lowry- interview Tyne Tees Television 1968 L. S. Lowry - A Biography by Shelley Rhode Lowry Press 1999 ISBN 9781902970011.
Tynes Tees Television Interview 1968
“I finished the thing; but I think I sprained my soul.”
On her novel Ship of Fools (1962) in McCall's magazine (August 1965)