“Truly there is no such thing as finality.”
Source: Dracula
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Bram Stoker 84
Irish novelist and short story writer, best known today for… 1847–1912Related quotes
Source: The Band That Played On (Thomas Nelson, 2011), pp. 153-154
“We can only know what we can truly imagine. Finally what we see comes from ourselves.”
Source: Woman on the Edge of Time

Power Foods for the Brain https://books.google.it/books?id=V9RkAgAAQBAJ&pg=PA0 (Hachette, 2013), ch. 9.

“Truly we are face to face with great things.”
Education (1902)
Context: Truly we are face to face with great things.
The mind of youth should be squarely turned to these phenomena. He should be told, as he regards them, how long and bitterly the race has struggled that he may have freedom.
His mind should be prepared to cooperate in the far-reaching changes now under way, and which will appear to him in majestic simplicity, breadth and clearness when the sun of democracy shall have arisen but a little higher in the firmament of the race, illumining more steadily and deeply than now the mind and will of the individual, the minds and wills of the millions of men his own mind and his own will.

Notes Toward a Supreme Fiction (1942), It Must Give Pleasure
Context: A thing final in itself and, therefore, good:
One of the vast repetitions final in
Themselves and, therefore, good, the going round And round and round, the merely going round,
Until merely going round is a final good,
The way wine comes at a table in a wood.
“Could it be that to truly love a thing is not to desire it, but to desire happiness for it?”
Source: The Letter

“Truly, thoughts are things, and their scope of operation is the world, itself.”
Source: Think and Grow Rich (1938), p. 87

“All things truly wicked start from an innocence.”
Ch 17; Variant: All things truly wicked start from innocence.
As quoted by R Z Sheppard in review of The Garden of Eden (1986) TIME (26 May 1986)
A Moveable Feast (1964)

“Perhaps only in a world of the blind will things be what they truly are.”
Source: Blindness (1995), p. 126