Frases de Bram Stoker (85 citações, página 2) | Citações e frases famosas

Frases de Bram Stoker
página 2

Abraham "Bram" Stoker foi um romancista, poeta e contista irlandês, mais conhecido atualmente por seu romance gótico Drácula, a principal obra no desenvolvimento do mito literário moderno do vampiro.

Sempre estudando em Dublin, escreveu seu primeiro ensaio aos 16 anos e, em 1875 concluiu seu mestrado. Conseguiu se tornar crítico de teatro, sem remuneração, no jornal Dublin Eventing Mail.

Em 1878 Stoker casou-se com Florence Balcombe, cujo ex-pretendente foi Oscar Wilde.Com a mulher, mudou-se para Londres, onde passou a trabalhar na companhia teatral Irving Lyceum, assumindo várias funções e permanecendo nela por 27 anos. Em 31 de Dezembro de 1879 nasceu seu único filho, Irving Noel Thornley Stoker. Trabalhando para o ator Henry Irving, Stoker viajou por vários países, apesar de nunca ter visitado a Europa Oriental, cenário de seu famoso romance.Enquanto esteve no Lyceum Theatre de Londres, começou a escrever romances e fez parte da equipe literária do jornal londrino Daily Telegraph, para o qual escreveu ficção e outros gêneros.Antes de escrever Drácula, Stoker passou vários anos pesquisando folclore europeu e as histórias mitológicas dos vampiros.

Depois de sofrer uma série de derrames cerebrais, Stoker faleceu em Londres em 1912. Alguns biógrafos atribuem a um processo desencadeado por uma sífilis terciária como causa de sua morte. Foi cremado e suas cinzas estão numa urna no Crematório de Golders Green, em Londres, Inglaterra. Wikipedia  

✵ 8. Novembro 1847 – 20. Abril 1912
Bram Stoker photo
Bram Stoker: 85 citações2 Curtidas

Bram Stoker frases e citações

Bram Stoker: Frases em inglês

“My first impression of the man as of steel was consolidated and enhanced.”

—  Bram Stoker, livro Personal Reminiscences of Henry Irving

On a later meeting of Richard Francis Burton, on 8 February 1879, in, Vol. 1, p. 225
Personal Reminiscences of Henry Irving (1907)
Contexto: My first impression of the man as of steel was consolidated and enhanced. He told us, amongst other things, of the work he had in hand. Three great books were partially done. The translation of the Arabian Nights, the metrical translation of Camoëns, and the Book of the Sword. These were all works of vast magnitude and requiring endless research. But he lived to complete them all.

“He is steel! He would go through you like a sword!”

—  Bram Stoker, livro Personal Reminiscences of Henry Irving

Describing his first meeting of Sir Richard Francis Burton and his wife Isabel, on 13 August 1878, Vol. 1, p. 224
Personal Reminiscences of Henry Irving (1907)
Contexto: I could not but be struck by the strangers. The lady was a big, handsome blonde woman, clever-looking and capable. But the man riveted my attention. He was dark, and forceful, and masterful, and ruthless. I have never seen so iron a countenance. I did not have much time to analyse the face; the bustle of arrival prevented that. But an instant was enough to make up my mind about him. We separated in the carriage after cordial wishes that we might meet again. When we were on the platform, I asked Irving:
"Who is that man?"
"Why," he said, " I thought I introduced you!"
"So you did, but you did not mention the names of the others!" He looked at me for an instant and said inquiringly as though something had struck him:
"Tell me, why do you want to know?"
"Because," I answered, "I never saw any one like him. He is steel! He would go through you like a sword!"
"You are right!" he said. "But I thought you knew him. That is Burton — Captain Burton who went to Mecca!

“Burton had a most vivid way of putting things — especially of the East. He had both a fine imaginative power and a memory richly stored not only from study but from personal experience.”

—  Bram Stoker, livro Personal Reminiscences of Henry Irving

On a meeting of Richard Francis Burton on 18 September 1886, Vol. 1, p. 230
Personal Reminiscences of Henry Irving (1907)
Contexto: Burton had a most vivid way of putting things — especially of the East. He had both a fine imaginative power and a memory richly stored not only from study but from personal experience. As he talked, fancy seemed to run riot in its alluring power; and the whole world of thought seemed to flame with gorgeous colour. Burton knew the East. Its brilliant dawns and sunsets; its rich tropic vegetation, and its arid fiery deserts; its cool, dark mosques and temples; its crowded bazaars; its narrow streets; its windows guarded for out-looking and from in-looking eyes; the pride and swagger of its passionate men, and the mysteries of its veiled women; its romances; its beauty; its horrors.

“The fame of an actor is won in minutes and seconds, not in years.”

—  Bram Stoker, livro Personal Reminiscences of Henry Irving

Preface
Personal Reminiscences of Henry Irving (1907)
Contexto: The fame of an actor is won in minutes and seconds, not in years. The latter are only helpful in the recurrence of opportunities; in the possibilities of repetition. It is not feasible, therefore, adequately to record the progress of his work. Indeed that work in its perfection cannot be recorded; words are, and can be, but faint suggestions of awakened emotion. The student of history can, after all, but accept in matters evanescent the judgment of contemporary experience. Of such, the weight of evidence can at best incline in one direction; and that tendency is not susceptible of further proof. So much, then, for the work of art that is not plastic and permanent. There remains therefore but the artist. Of him the other arts can make record in so far as external appearance goes. Nay, more, the genius of sculptor or painter can suggest — with an understanding as subtle as that of the sun-rays which on sensitive media can depict what cannot be seen by the eye — the existence of these inner forces and qualities whence accomplished works of any kind proceed. It is to such art that we look for the teaching of our eyes. Modern science can record something of the actualities of voice and tone. Writers of force and skill and judgment can convey abstract ideas of controlling forces and purposes; of thwarting passions; of embarrassing weaknesses; of all the bundle of inconsistencies which make up an item of concrete humanity. From all these may be derived some consistent idea of individuality. This individuality is at once the ideal and the objective of portraiture.

“Despair has its own calms.”

—  Bram Stoker, livro Dracula

Jonathan Harker
Fonte: Dracula (1897)

“Loneliness will sit over our roofs with brooding wings.”

—  Bram Stoker, livro Dracula

Fonte: Dracula

“Enter freely and of your own free will!”

—  Bram Stoker, livro Dracula

Fonte: Dracula

“I have always thought that a wild animal never looks so well as when some obstacle of pronounced durability is between us.”

—  Bram Stoker, livro Dracula

The Keeper in the Zoological Gardens
Fonte: Dracula (1897)
Contexto: I have always thought that a wild animal never looks so well as when some obstacle of pronounced durability is between us. A personal experience has intensified rather than diminished that idea.

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