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Alphabetical    [«  »]
dealing 1
dealt 1
dear 5
death 40
deaths 3
debtor 1
decay 1
Frequency    [«  »]
41 evil
41 little
41 themselves
40 death
40 pain
40 present
40 social
Marcus Aurelius Antoninus
Meditations

IntraText - Concordances

death

   Book
1 2 | the good and the bad. But~death certainly, and life, honour 2 2 | voices give~reputation; what death is, and the fact that, if 3 2 | and, finally, waiting for death with a cheerful mind, as 4 3 | because we are daily nearer to death, but also because the conception~ 5 3 | pursuing or flying from death; but whether for a longer 6 4 | comes from some source.~ Death is such as generation is, 7 4 | live ten thousand years. Death~hangs over thee. While thou 8 4 | for such is disease, and death, and~calumny, and treachery, 9 4 | of Heraclitus, that the death of earth is~to become water, 10 4 | to become water, and the death of water is to become air, 11 4 | is to become air, and the~death of air is to become fire, 12 4 | after endless discourses on death or~immortality; how many 13 4 | help towards contempt of death,~to pass in review those 14 4 | small between birth and death; and consider with how~much 15 6 | Macedonian and his groom by death were brought to~the same 16 6 | them without being angry.~ Death is a cessation of the impressions 17 7 | that Law rules all.~ About death: Whether it is a dispersion, 18 7 | man then will think that death also is no evil.- Certainly 19 7 | compute the hazard of life or death,~and should not rather look 20 7 | into the reckoning, either death or anything~else, before 21 7 | s course to 'scape from death.~ The breeze which heaven 22 7 | Socrates died a more noble~death, and disputed more skilfully 23 8 | respect to fame and~ignominy, death and life, he has such and 24 8 | rest,~not considering the death of a single man, but of 25 8 | Again here consider the death of a whole race.~ It is 26 8 | admit it.~ He who fears death either fears the loss of 27 9 | then,~and pleasure, or death and life, or honour and 28 9 | are men.~ Do not despise death, but be well content with 29 9 | contemptuous with respect to death,~but to wait for it as one 30 9 | made best reconciled to death by~observing the objects 31 9 | mayest say, Come quick, O death,~lest perchance I, too, 32 9 | opinion, and in~a sense their death, is no evil. Turn thy thoughts 33 9 | also every change was a death. Is~this anything to fear? 34 10| poor~thing called fame, and death, and all such things. If, 35 10| pause and~ask thyself, if death is a dreadful thing because 36 10| when a man dies a quiet death, the poor soul is easily 37 12| thee up to the time of thy death, free from~perturbations, 38 12| when he is overtaken by death; and consider the shortness 39 12| is, what~pleasure is, and death, and fame; who is to himself 40 12| extinguished before thy death?~ When a man has presented


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