- Will Halloway: If you're a good person, then demons can't harm you, can they? Am I? Am I a good person?
- Charles Halloway: Well, I wouldn't count on your mother's answer right now, but I think you are.
- Charles Halloway: I, uh, have the honor, sir.
- Mr. Dark: And have had for many years, I do believe. All that time spent living only through other men's lives. Dreaming only other men's dreams. What a waste.
- Charles Halloway: Sometimes a man can learn more from other men's dreams than he can from his own. Come visit me, sir, if you wish to improve your education.
- Mr. Dark: I will, and I may improve yours.
- Charles Halloway: I know who you are. You are the autumn people. Where do you come from? The dust. Where do you go to? The grave.
- Mr. Dark: Yes. We are the hungry ones. Your torments call us like dogs in the night. And we do feed, and feed well.
- Charles Halloway: To stuff yourselves on other people's nightmares.
- Mr. Dark: And butter our plain bread with delicious pain. So, you do understand a little.
- Charles Halloway: You are known in this town. My father knew you.
- Mr. Dark: Your father? The preacher? That half-man?
- Charles Halloway: He lived on goodness.
- Mr. Dark: Tasteless fare. Funerals, bad marriages, lost loves, lonely beds. That is our diet. We suck that misery and find it sweet. We search for more always. We can smell young boys ulcerating to be men a thousand miles off. And hear a middle-aged fool like yourself groaning with midnight despairs from halfway around the world.
- Charles Halloway: [quoting Shakespeare] By the pricking of my thumbs, something wicked this way comes.
- Mr. Dark: Then rang the bells both loud and deep. God is not dead nor doth he sleep.
- Charles Halloway: The wrong will fail, the right prevail, with peace on Earth, goodwill to men.
- Mr. Dark: It's a thousand years to Christmas, Mr. Holloway.
- Charles Halloway: You're wrong. It's here, in this library tonight, and can't be spoiled.
- Mr. Dark: Did Will and Jim bring it with them on the soles of their shoes? Then, we shall have to scrape them.
- Narrator: [First Line] First of all, it was October, a rare month of boys; full of cold winds, long nights, dark promises. Days get short. The shadows lengthen. The wind warms in such a way, you want to run forever through the fields, because up ahead, ten thousand pumpkins lie waiting to be cut. It was the October of my 12th year when the seller of lightning rods came along the road toward Green Town, Illinois, sneaking glances over his shoulder. Somewhere not far back was a terrible storm. Even now, on those special autumn days, when the air smells like smoke, and the twilights are orange and ash gray, my mind goes back to Green Town, the place where I grew up. In my memory, I'm back on Main Street again, among the neighbors who gave me my first glimpses into the fearful needs of the human heart.
- Charles Halloway: [to Will] That's no way to save your friend, Jim, stop it! They like that, God, they like tears! Jump about, hoot and holler!
- Narrator: [Final Lines] For my father, being old was all right now. He had freed himself from the shadows, and liberated our town. So, I think he knew on that bright morning, that he'd made a memory that would live as long as sons tell sons about fathers they love.
- Charles Halloway: [to Mrs. Nightshade] For God's sake, go home! The man meeting you here isn't your husband!
- Charles Halloway: [quoting Shakespeare's "Macbeth" act 4, scene 1, lines 45-46, 2nd witch] By the pricking of my thumbs, something wicked this way comes.
- Mr. Dark: [quoting Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's " Christmas Bells", better known as the Christmas Carol, "I Heard The Bells on Christmas Day"] Then rang the bells both loud and deep. God is not dead nor doth he sleep.
- Charles Halloway: [quoting Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's " Christmas Bells", better known as the Christmas Carol, "I Heard The Bells on Christmas Day"] The wrong will fail, the right prevail, with peace on Earth, goodwill to men.
- Mr. Dark: It's a thousand years to Christmas, Mr. Holloway.
- Charles Halloway: You're wrong. It's here, in this library tonight, and can't be spoiled.
- Mr. Dark: Did Will and Jim bring it with them on the soles of their shoes? Then, we shall have to scrape them.
- Charles Halloway: A father should be able to play baseball with his son.
- Mrs. Halloway: Baseball's not necessary, not with a heart like yours, he'll forgive you that.