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Quotes

Drive your cart and your plow over the bones of the dead.

—William Blake, c. 1790

To desire immortality for the individual is really the same as wanting to perpetuate an error forever.

—Arthur Schopenhauer, 1819

Men have written in the most convincing manner to prove that death is no evil, and this opinion has been confirmed on a thousand celebrated occasions by the weakest of men as well as by heroes. Even so I doubt whether any sensible person has ever believed it, and the trouble men take to convince others as well as themselves that they do shows clearly that it is no easy undertaking. 

—La Rochefoucauld, 1665

You are dust, and to dust you shall return.

—Book of Genesis, c. 800 BC

It is noble to die before doing anything that deserves death.

—Anaxandrides, c. 376

I am not resigned to the shutting away of loving hearts in the hard ground.

—Edna St. Vincent Millay, 1928

I imagined it was more difficult to die. 

—Louis XIV, 1715

Nobody, sir, dies willingly.

—Antiphanes, c. 370 BC

Bereavement is a darkness impenetrable to the imagination of the unbereaved.

—Iris Murdoch, 1974

The life of the dead consists in the recollection cherished of them by the living.

—Marcus Tullius Cicero, 43 BC

Death and vulgarity are the only two facts in the nineteenth century that one cannot explain away.

—Oscar Wilde, 1891

The play is the tragedy “Man,” And its hero the conqueror worm.

—Edgar Allan Poe, 1843

Those from whom we were born have long since departed, and those with whom we grew up exist only in memory. We, too, through the approach of death, become, as it were, trees growing on the sandy bank of a river.

—Bhartrihari, c. 400