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| A dead man does not make war. Italian. | 1 |
| A dead man does not speak. Portuguese. | 2 |
| A dead man has neither relations nor friends. French. | 3 |
| A dead mouse feels no cold. | 4 |
| A death-beds a detector of the heart. Young. | 5 |
| A fly, a grape stone, or a hair can kill. Pope. | 6 |
| A man has learned much, who has learned how to die. German. | 7 |
| A sudden death is the best. Cæsar. | 8 |
| All death is sudden to the unprepared. | 9 |
| All men are born richer than they die. German. | 10 |
| An escape from death is worth more than the prayers of good men. Don Quixote. | 11 |
| An honorable death is better than an inglorious life. Socrates. | 12 |
| As dead as a door nail. | 13 |
| As dead as a herring. | 14 |
| As soon as man expert from time has found the key of life, it opes the gates of death. Young. | 15 |
| As soon as man is born he begins to die. German. | 16 |
| As soon dies the calf as the cow. French. | 17 |
| As soon goes the lambs skin to market as the old ewes. | 18 |
| Be still prepared for death, and death or life shall thereby be the sweeter. Shakespeare. | 19 |
| Better once dead than all the time suffering in need. German. | 20 |
But kings and mightiest potentates must die; For thats the end of human misery. Shakespeare. | 21 |
| Charon waits for all. | 22 |
Come soon or late deaths undetermined day, This mortal being only can decay. Ovid. | 23 |
| Dead dogs dont bite. German, Dutch. | 24 |
| Dead folks cant bite. | 25 |
| Dead men do not bite. Theoditus. | 26 |
| Dead men pay no surgeons. Fielding. | 27 |
| Dead men tell no tales. | 28 |
| Death foreseen, never comes. Italian. | 29 |
| Death always comes too early or too late. Blackwoods Edinburgh Magazine. | 30 |
| Death and life are in the power of the tongue. Job. | 31 |
| Death and love are two wings which bear men from earth to heaven. Michael Angelo. | 32 |
| Death defies the doctor. | 33 |
| Death devours lambs as well as sheep. | 34 |
| Death does not blow a trumpet. Danish. | 35 |
| Death has a thousand doors to let out life. Massinger. | 36 |
| Death hath nothing terrible in it, but what life hath made so. | 37 |
| Death is a black camel that kneels at every mans gate. | 38 |
Death is but what the haughty brave, The weak must bear, the wretch must crave. Byron. | 39 |
| Death is in the pot. Dutch. | 40 |
| Death is most unfortunate in prosperity. (Æsop however says it is then most happy to good men.) Plutarch. | 41 |
| Death is never premature except to those who die without virtue. French. | 42 |
| Death is shameful in flight, glorious in victory. Cicero. | 43 |
| Death is the grand leveller. | 44 |
| Death keeps no calendar. | 45 |
| Death meets us everywhere. | 46 |
| Death opens the gate to good fame and extinguishes envy. Byron. | 47 |
| Death rather frees us from ills than robs us of our goods. | 48 |
Deaths but a path that must be trod, If man would ever pass to God. Parnell. | 49 |
| Deaths-day is dooms-day. | 50 |
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| Death says to the man with his throat cut, How ugly thou art. (Hypocrisy.) Spanish. | 51 |
| Death spares neither pope nor beggar. | 52 |
| Death to the wolf is life to the lamb. | 53 |
| Death to usliberty. Caucasian battle cry. | 54 |
| Death will hear of no excuse. Euripides. | 55 |
| Deep swimmers and high climbers seldom die in their beds. Dutch. | 56 |
| Do not speak ill of the dead, but deem them sacred who have gone into the immortal state. Ancients. | 57 |
Dread thought, that all the work mans life can have Is but to bear his coffin towrd his grave. | 58 |
| Every one must pay his debt to nature. German. | 59 |
| Feign death and the bull will leave you. Portuguese. | 60 |
| Few have luck, all have death. Danish. | 61 |
Golden lads and girls, all must As chimney-sweepers come to dust. Shakespeare. | 62 |
| Great body, great grave. German. | 63 |
| He dies like a beast who has done no good while he lived. | 64 |
| He hath lived ill that knows not how to die well. | 65 |
| He hauls at a long rope that expects anothers death. Italian. | 66 |
| He should wear iron shoes that bides his neighbors death. | 67 |
| He that died half a year ago is as dead as Adam. | 68 |
| He that dies pays all debts. Shakespeare. | 69 |
| He that dies this year is quit of the next. Shakespeare. | 70 |
| He that dies troubles his parents but once, but he that lives ill torments them perpetually. | 71 |
| He that waits for dead mens shoes may go long enough barefoot. | 72 |
| He waits long that waits for another mans death. Dutch. | 73 |
| He who dies not in his twenty-third year, drowns not in his twenty-fourth, is not slain in his twenty-fifth, may boast of good days. Dutch. | 74 |
| He who waits for a dead mans shoes is in danger of going barefoot. French, Danish. | 75 |
| He whom the gods love dies young. Plautus. | 76 |
| He would be a good one to send for death. Italian. | 77 |
| Heaven gives its favorites an early death. Byron. | 78 |
| His candle burns within the socket. | 79 |
| How wise in God to place death at the end of life. German. | 80 |
| I know of nobody that has a mind to die this year. | 81 |
| If death be terrible the fault is not in death, but thee. | 82 |
| If you want to be dead wash your head and go to bed. Spanish. | 83 |
| It is a lightning before death. | 84 |
| It is as natural to die as to be born. | 85 |
| It is better to die an honest death than to live an infamous life. Petrarch. | 86 |
| It is better to die once than to live always in fear of death. Cæsar. | 87 |
| It is better to die with honor than to live in infamy. Agricola. | 88 |
| It is hard even to the most miserable to die. | 89 |
| It takes four living men to carry one dead man out of the house. Italian. | 90 |
| Julius Cæsar lived in the midst of combats and died in the midst of the Senate. Turkish Spy. | 91 |
| Keep thine eye fixed on the end of life. Solon. | 92 |
| Me dead, the world is dead. Italian. | 93 |
| Men fear death as children to go in the dark. | 94 |
| Never say die. | 95 |
| No priority among the dead. | 96 |
| Noble spirits war not with the dead. Byron. | 97 |
| Of the great and of the dead, either speak well or say nothing. Italian. | 98 |
| Pale death knocks at the cottage and the palace with an impartial hand. Horace. | 99 |
| She is good and honored who is dead and buried. Spanish. | 100 |
| Six feet of earth makes all men equal. | 101 |
| The actions of a dying man are void of disguise. Turkish Spy. | 102 |
| The bitterness of death must be tasted by him who is to appreciate the sweetness of deliverance. Blackwoods Edinburgh Magazine. | 103 |
| The dead and absent have no friends. | 104 |
| The dead are soon forgotten. | 105 |
| The dead cannot defend, therefore speak well of the dead. Latin. | 106 |
| The dead man is unenvied. Modern Greek. | 107 |
| The dead open the eyes of the living. Portuguese. | 108 |
| The evening praises the day, death the life. German. | 109 |
| The first breath is the beginning of death. | 110 |
| The greatest business of life is to prepare for death. | 111 |
| The heathen looked on death without fear, the Christian exulted. Bulwer. | 112 |
| The quiet haven of us all. Wordsworth. | 113 |
| The road of death must be travelled by all. Horace. | 114 |
| The sight of death is as a bell that warns old age to a sepulchre. Shakespeare. | 115 |
| The sun and death are two things we cannot stare in the face. | 116 |
| The worlds an inn and death the journeys end. Dryden. | 117 |
| There is no medicine against death. | 118 |
| There is no remedy for all evils but death. | 119 |
| They never fail who die in a great cause. Byron. | 120 |
| They that live longest must die at last. | 121 |
| Time goes, death comes. Dutch, German. | 122 |
| Tis ours to bear, not judge the dead. | 123 |
| To die is nothing: tis but parting with a mountain of vexation. Massinger. | 124 |
| To die is the fate of man, but to live with lingering anguish is generally his folly. Rambler. | 125 |
| To insult the dead is cruel and unjust. Homer. | 126 |
| To live in the hearts we leave behind us is not to die. | 127 |
| To wrestle with ghosts; i.e., to speak ill of the dead. Latin. | 128 |
| Until death there is no knowing what may befall. Italian. | 129 |
| We die as we live. Turkish. | 130 |
| We had better die at once than to live constantly in fear of death. Dion. | 131 |
When hes forsakenwithered and shaken, What can an old man do but die. Hood. | 132 |
| When Im dead everybodys dead and the pig too. Italian. | 133 |
| When one is dead it is for a long time. French. | 134 |
| When you die even your tomb shall be comfortable. Russian. | 135 |
| When you die your trumpeter will be buried. | 136 |
| Who dies in youth and vigor dies the best. Homer. | 137 |
| Who thinks often of death does nothing worthy of life. Italian. | 138 |
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