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  1. Ricardo Montez (born Levy Isaac Attias; 20 September 1923 – 26 October 2010) was a Gibraltarian actor best known for his role as the Spanish bartender Juan Cervantes, a student in Jeremy Brown's EFL class in the ITV comedy series Mind Your Language and one of four students (along with Giovanni Capello, Anna Schmidt, and Ranjeet Singh) to ...

    • Margaret's Moon – Jackie Kay
    • Epitaph – Merrit Malloy
    • Dear Lovely Death – Langston Hughes
    • A Song of Living – Amelia Burr
    • Afterwards – Thomas Hardy

    This uplifting eulogy, written by Kay for her mother Margaret, is brimming with beautiful Scottish scenery. Kay describes how her mother's spirit lives on in the cairns, the hills and braes of Scotland. "After she died, I swear the sky Had the most beautiful of all sunsets" Read the full poem(opens in new window)

    "when you need me, / Put your arms / Around anyone" writes Malloy, asking people not to mourn for her – but instead to use that energy and love to care for those who are still alive. This poem is included in the Mishkan T'filah, a prayer book used by Reform Jewish congregations. Read the full poem(opens in new window)

    In this short but sweet poem, Hughes describes death, not as an end or an experience to be feared. But instead as something "lovely", that "taketh all things under wing / Never to kill— / Only to change / Into some other thing". Read the full poem

    Like the famous Edith Piaf song, 'Non, je ne regrette rien', this poem speaks of a life well lived with no space for petty regrets. The author writes movingly of having known friendship, joy, love and adversity – all the ingredients of a full life. And the poem's beating heart is contained in this wonderful, repeating refrain: "Because I have loved...

    Although Britain's best known writer at the time, this poem is simply about Hardy's hopes that his country neighbours will remember him as a good countryman who appreciated the wonders of nature: "He was a man who used to notice such things". It's a beautiful poem, filled with unforgettable images of the English countryside. Read the full poem Ever...

    • Because I could not stop for Death. By Emily Dickinson. Because I could not stop for Death – He kindly stopped for me – The Carriage held but just Ourselves
    • Death Is Nothing At All. By Harry Scott-Holland. Death is nothing at all. It does not count. I have only slipped away into the next room. Nothing has happened.
    • Wild Geese. By Mary Oliver.
    • For Katrina’s sun dial. By Henry Van Dyke. Time is too slow for those who wait, Too swift for those who fear, Too long for those who grieve, Too short for those who rejoice,
  2. Because I could not stop for Death –. He kindly stopped for me –. The Carriage held but just Ourselves –. And Immortality. These lines, which open the poem, are among the most well known of Dickinson’s verses.

    • “Lady Lazarus,” Sylvia Plath. The sounds alone are enough to keep me alive, the language pulling away from meaning like flesh from bone (“Soon, soon the flesh/ The grave cave ate will be/ At home on me // And I a smiling woman.”)
    • “The Big Loser,” Max Ritvo. Ritvo is now famous not only for his poetry but for his sweetness in the face of death. This poem is one of many bittersweet lenses on the life he was getting ready to leave.
    • “If I should die,” Emily Dickinson. Emily Dickinson wrote about death a lot, and a number of her poems would fit in this category. I chose this one for its cheer, its cuteness as it imagines how nice life will be for everyone else after the speaker’s death—plus, you don’t get too many death poems that end in exclamation marks.
    • “The Mower,” Philip Larkin. Here, Larkin takes a small, everyday death and blows it up to the size of the human condition. The last couplet makes me want to cry—but it also makes me want to go out into the world and make friends with it.
  3. In this article, we will delve into the depths of the human experience, exploring how poets have grappled with the duality of death and life through their evocative verses. Índice. The Dance of Mortality. Contemplating Transience. Seeking Meaning in Mortality.

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  5. 15+ Contemplative Poems about Mortality. These interesting verses about mortality delve into the inevitability of death and the changing nature of life. They also explore the fragility of existence, prompting reflections on the meaning and legacy one leaves behind. Poets confront the impermanence of being, the passage of time, and the ...

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