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Holly berries from Dickens

Chapter 18: Seventeenth Day.
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About This Book

A curated sequence of short aphorisms and brief extracts drawn from the novelist's writings, arranged as daily readings labeled by day. Each entry presents pithy moral observations, practical maxims, and character sketches on virtues, friendship, duty, hope, and human foibles, often with the original work or character noted. The selections act as compact reflections suited to daily contemplation, blending wit, moral instruction, and worldly advice into concise standalone lines that together form a thematic sampler of recurring ethical concerns.

Seventeenth Day.

Nothing is past hope.
Christmas Carol.
There is scarcely a sin in the world
that is in my eyes such a crying one
as ingratitude.

Tom Pinch.

Truth and honesty, like precious stones,
are perhaps
most easily imitated at a distance.

Nicholas Nickleby.

Life is made of ever so many partings
welded together.

Great Expectations.

The best among us need deal lightly
with faults.

Dickens.