Top 14 Quotes About Death And Being At Peace
#1. When I cry - when I let myself cry - that's who I cry for. I don't cry for myself. I cry for the Cassie that's gone.
And I wonder what that Cassie would think of me.
The Cassie who kills.
Rick Yancey
#2. When you see a 14-year-old boy who has never known what peace looks like for a day in his life, there's part of you as a human being that feels some degree, you can say, compassion for the fact that these boys have known war, famine, violence and death from the day they were born.
Amanda Lindhout
#3. Watching a peaceful death of a human being reminds us of a falling star; one of a million lights in a vast sky that flares up for a brief moment only to disappear into the endless night forever.
Elisabeth Kubler-Ross
#4. Man reaches the highest point of lovableness at 12 to 17 - to get it back, in a second flowering, at the age of 70 to 90
Isak Dinesen
#6. Dwell in peace in the home of your own being, and the Messenger of Death will not be able to touch you.
Guru Nanak
#7. Successful writing is a slow, daily, meticulous form of mental illness.
Don Roff
#8. The ten thousand things belong to one storehouse and life and death share the same body.
Zhuangzi
#9. Companies should be selling ideas more than benefits. Sell ideas. Not stuff.
Aaron Ross
#10. The thought of death leaves me in perfect peace, for I have a firm conviction that our spirit is a being of indestructible nature; it works on from eternity to eternity, it is like the sun, which though it seems to set to our mortal eyes, does not really set, but shines on perpetually.
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe
#11. Being alone can be good. It is easy to find peace alone. But sometimes...being alone is a kind of death.
Dean Koontz
#12. Being alone can be good. It's easy to find peace alone. But sometimes, being alone is a king of death.
Dean Koontz
#13. The sum of all known value and respect, I add up in you, whoever you are.
Walt Whitman
#14. Let's go." Jamie's hand was firm on my arm, and I made no protest. Following Jared, guarded by the sailors, we stole away from the quay, surreptitious as though we had started the fire.
Diana Gabaldon