The Oxford Book of Death"Reading for this anthology," writes D.J. Enright, "I was moved to the thought that on no theme have writers shown themselves more lively." A survivor of Belsen voiced the same sentiment when, reflecting on the concentration camps, he wrote, "When in death we are in the midst of life." By turns poignant, tragic, comic, and inspiring, this anthology of thoughts about death ranges from ancient times to the present day--including almost 900 selections by poets, novelists, philosophers, scientists, and common people. Arranged under headings such as "Love," "War," "Last Words," and "Children," these selections show the varied, sometimes surprising, reactions of the dying and the bereaved to the final human act. |
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ARNOLD TOYNBEE ( 1889-1975 ) , Life After Death a The attributes of life were at some time evoked in inanimate matter by the action of a force of whose nature we can form no conception . It may perhaps have been a process similar in ...
ARNOLD TOYNBEE ( 1889-1975 ) , Life After Death a The attributes of life were at some time evoked in inanimate matter by the action of a force of whose nature we can form no conception . It may perhaps have been a process similar in ...
6 psl.
All things summon us to death : nature , almost envious of the good she has given us , tells us often and gives us notice that she cannot for long allow us that scrap of matter she has lent . . . she has need of it for other forms ...
All things summon us to death : nature , almost envious of the good she has given us , tells us often and gives us notice that she cannot for long allow us that scrap of matter she has lent . . . she has need of it for other forms ...
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Hell is another matter altogether , and more our matter . Chateaubriand is surely correct when he accounts for man's greater skill in depicting hell by relating the pains of its inhabitants to the sufferings of earthly existence .
Hell is another matter altogether , and more our matter . Chateaubriand is surely correct when he accounts for man's greater skill in depicting hell by relating the pains of its inhabitants to the sufferings of earthly existence .
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LibraryThing Review
Vartotojo apžvalga - plenilune - LibraryThingI have the old hard-bound version, given to my mother after my father died, with passages she underlined and my little sister's crayon scribbles. Growing up, I assumed it must be like The Egyptian ... Skaityti visą apžvalgą
LibraryThing Review
Vartotojo apžvalga - DrJane - LibraryThingI'm not sure why someone took the trouble to write this book, nor indeed why Oxford published it! Skaityti visą apžvalgą
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A. E. Housman Alistair Elliot Arthur Waley asked believe bird body breath buried child coffin Collected Poems Copyright Czesław Miłosz D. J. Enright dark dead dear death died dying earth Epitaph eternal eyes Faber & Faber Faber Ltd face fear feel flowers friends funeral ghosts grave grief H. T. Lowe-Porter hand hath head hear heart heaven Hell human immortality John kill Kleinzeit Knopf Inc leave letter live look Lord Michael Hamburger mind mother mourning N. J. Dawood nature never night Oxford University Press pain Penguin Books Ltd permission of Faber permission of Oxford pleasure poet poor Reprinted by permission sleep smile sorrow soul spirit suicide sweet Sylvia Townsend Warner talk Ted Hughes tell thee things Thomas thou thought trans W. S. Merwin walk weeping words young