Concise Lectures on How to Die

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  • The
  • rain
  • that
  • often
  • leaves
  • the
  • playing
  • child
  • in
  • sorrows
  • also
  • puts
  • the
  • farmer
  • in
  • celebration.
  • Though
  • the
  • first
  • feels
  • obstructed
  • by
  • it,
  • the
  • latter
  • loves
  • it
  • for
  • the
  • privilege
  • of
  • watering
  • down
  • his
  • flowers
  • and
  • filling
  • his
  • irrigation
  • tank.
  • Therefore
  • nothing
  • I
  • say
  • is
  • entirely
  • bad
  • or
  • completely
  • monstrous.
  • Even
  • death
  • as
  • it
  • stands
  • is
  • not
  • entirely
  • bad
  • and
  • I
  • trust
  • I
  • speak
  • in
  • charity.I
  • say
  • this
  • because
  • in
  • death,
  • the
  • prisoner
  • parts
  • with
  • his
  • chains
  • and
  • the
  • jailer
  • with
  • his
  • intimidations.
  • In
  • death,
  • we
  • are
  • liberated
  • from
  • the
  • sorrows
  • of
  • tears
  • and
  • the
  • miseries
  • of
  • heart-break.
  • In
  • death,
  • we
  • are
  • freed
  • from
  • the
  • pains
  • of
  • sickness
  • and
  • the
  • agonies
  • of
  • midnight
  • woes.“Death”,
  • indeed
  • as
  • Charles
  • Caleb
  • Colton
  • indicated,
  • “is
  • the
  • liberator
  • of
  • him
  • whom
  • freedom
  • cannot
  • release,
  • the
  • physician
  • of
  • him
  • whom
  • medicine
  • cannot
  • cure,
  • and
  • the
  • comforter
  • of
  • him
  • whom
  • time
  • cannot
  • console.”
  • Why
  • then
  • should
  • death
  • be
  • greatly
  • feared.
  • The
  • living
  • knows
  • he
  • will
  • die
  • but
  • the
  • dead
  • knows
  • nothing
  • at
  • all.This
  • amazing
  • classic
  • will
  • practically
  • school
  • you
  • on
  • how
  • to
  • live
  • and
  • die.
  • It
  • is
  • hard-hitting.
  • It
  • is
  • tough
  • and
  • it
  • is rough.
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