Encontrados 668 resultados para: Death
nor ever tarnish thy renown, until thy days are finished; then, at the hour of thy death, make thy bequests. (Ecclesiasticus 33, 24)
Sometimes, by this means, I have been in danger of death, and only the divine favour has preserved me from it. (Ecclesiasticus 34, 13)
Friends every man has that will say, I love him well; yet friends they may be in name only. Death itself cannot match it for sadness, (Ecclesiasticus 37, 1)
Ill counsel may make the heart veer round; four points its compass has, good and evil, life and death; and it is ever the tongue that sways it.✻ Shrewdness there is that can much impart, yet is its own enemy. (Ecclesiasticus 37, 21)
But grief will but hasten thy own death, will be the grave of thy own strength; where heart goes sad, back goes bowed. (Ecclesiasticus 38, 19)
Let his memory rest, as he rests, in death; enough for thee that thou shouldst comfort him in the hour when his spirit leaves him.✻ (Ecclesiasticus 38, 24)
A life that shall leave such fame as one man wins in a thousand; a death not unrewarded. (Ecclesiasticus 39, 15)
Fire, hail, hunger and death, all these were made for wreaking of vengeance; (Ecclesiasticus 39, 35)
What solicitude is his, what fears catch at his heart; how quick his mind runs out to meet coming events! And the term of it all is death. (Ecclesiasticus 40, 2)
whether he goes clad in purple and wears a crown, or has but coarse linen to wear? Anger he shall know, and jealousy, and concern, and bewilderment, and the fear of death, and the grudge that rankles, and rivalry. (Ecclesiasticus 40, 4)
Out upon thee, death, how bitter is the thought of thee to a man that lives at ease in his own home, (Ecclesiasticus 41, 1)
Hail, death! Welcome is thy doom to a man that is in need, and lacks vigour; (Ecclesiasticus 41, 3)
