Death is acceptable only if it represents the physically necessary passage toward a union, the condition of a metamorphosis.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
Death is imposed only on creatures, not their creations, and has therefore always appeared in art in a broken form: as allegory.
Death is not only an unusually severe punishment, unusual in its pain, in its finality and in its enormity, but is serves no penal purpose more effectively than a less severe punishment.
It is only in the light of the inescapable fact of death that a person can adequately engage and enter upon the mysterious fact of life.
Death may simply be an alteration in consciousness, a transition for continued life in a nonmaterial form.
There is no such thing as death. In nature nothing dies. From each sad remnant of decay, some forms of life arise so shall his life be taken away before he knoweth that he hath it.
Death is something that happens to others, you think, until it happens to you.
Death is the separation of soul from body.
You can't choreograph death, but you can choreograph your funeral.
Death is final. No it is not just final, it's worse than that, it's diminishing: the dead continue to decrease, to occupy less space.
Thirdly, Death is nothing else but a change of a short and temporary for an unalterable and eternal condition.