Death
Book Specification
Item Code: | IDJ068 |
Author: | Maurice Maeterlinck |
Publisher: | Pilgrims Book Pvt. Ltd, Delhi |
Language: | English |
Edition: | 1998 |
ISBN: | 8176240249 |
Pages: | 110 |
Cover: | Hardcover |
Other Details | 5.6" X 4.3" |
Weight | 140 gm |
Book Description
About the book:
Death as well said "Death and death alone is what we must concerns about life; and not some vague future or survival, inn which we shall not be present." In simple language Maurice Maeterlinck describe the primitive idea of death and also details how to get rid of that which comes before. The Napoleon also said that the Doctors and priests have long been making death grievous. All our knowledge only helps us to die in greater pain than the animals that no nothing. Death deseeds upon us to take away a life or change its forms. Death is definite but it is childish to talk of happiness and unhappiness where infinitive is question.
I | Our Idea of Death | 1 | |
II | A Primitive Idea | 3 | |
III | We Must Englishten and establish out Idea of Dealth | 8 | |
IV | We must rid Death of that which goes before | 10 | |
V | The panges of Death must be attributed to man alone | 12 | |
VI | The mistake of the Doctor in Prolonging the pangs of Death | 16 | |
VII | Their Arguments | 18 | |
VIII | That which does not belong to Death | 21 | |
IX | The horrors of the grave also do not belong to Death | 26 | |
X | When contemplating the unknown into which Death hurls US, let us first put rekuguiys fears from out minds | 30 | |
XI | Annihilation impossible | 34 | |
XII | The survival of our consciousness | 39 | |
XIII | It seems impossible | 41 | |
XIV | The same, continued | 48 | |
XV | If it were possible, it would not be dreadful | 51 | |
XVI | The survival without consciousness | 55 | |
XVII | The same, continued | 58 | |
XVIII | The limited Ego would become a torture | 62 | |
XIX | A new ego can find a nucleus and develop itself in infinity | 65 | |
XX | The only sorrow that can touch our mind | 71 | |
XXI | Infinity as conceived by out reasons | 74 | |
XXII | Infinity as perceived by out reasons | 77 | |
XXIII | Which of the two shall we know? | 80 | |
XXIV | The Infinity which both our reason and out senses can admit | 83 | |
XXV | Our fate in infinity | 88 | |
XXVI | The same, continued | 91 | |
XXVII | Shall we be unhappy there? | 94 | |
XXVIII | Questions without answers | 97 | |
XXIX | The same, continued | 102 | |
XXX | It is not necessary to answer them | 107 | |
XXXI | Everything must finish exempt from suffering | 110 |