thanatopsis - william cullen bryant

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What is your vision of death? Where do we go after we die? Describe the images you may see after/during death. Is death the enemy or a natural part of life? What important lessons has life/death taught you?

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Page 1: Thanatopsis - William Cullen Bryant

What is your vision of death? Where do we go after we die? Describe the images you may see

after/during death. Is death the enemy or a natural part of life? What important lessons has life/death

taught you?

Page 2: Thanatopsis - William Cullen Bryant
Page 3: Thanatopsis - William Cullen Bryant

• “Memento Mori” – decorations to remind people that they will die one day

Page 4: Thanatopsis - William Cullen Bryant
Page 5: Thanatopsis - William Cullen Bryant

“Tempus Fugit” – means time flies

Page 6: Thanatopsis - William Cullen Bryant

“Carpe Diem” – Seize the day; live life to the fullest; make a mark on the world; be remembered

Page 7: Thanatopsis - William Cullen Bryant

Main idea: all people die and their remains return to earth to become part of the whole of nature.•lines 8-15: People can derive lessons from Nature. They should look to this source when they are feeling sad and fearful about death.

Page 8: Thanatopsis - William Cullen Bryant

• People’s thoughts near death: Of the last bitter hour, sad images of agony, shroud and pall, narrow house (coffin or grave)

• Nature described will help those that are in harmony with it, happiness and beauty, a healing sympathy when dark thoughts of death enter human minds

Page 9: Thanatopsis - William Cullen Bryant

• Lines 22-30• Earth claims the body, individual being is surrendered,

human becomes brother to the insensible rock, trees grow through it

• Emphasizes the relationship and closeness of humans and nature.

Page 10: Thanatopsis - William Cullen Bryant

Hopeful and joyous; there is companionship; in contrast with the gloomier, solitary mood of the first stanza

Page 11: Thanatopsis - William Cullen Bryant

• When you die, you will not be alone. Joined by patriarchs, kings, the wise, the good, the beautiful, seers and other powerful humans.

Page 12: Thanatopsis - William Cullen Bryant

Lines 48-50. More people buried in the earth than alive on it. In Bryant’s time, fewer people were alive on earth than the total number who had previously died.

Page 13: Thanatopsis - William Cullen Bryant

• Nature will decorate your tomb. Quiet mountains, woods and majestic rivers grow on top of graves. Melancholy ocean, the shining sun, the stars and planets shine on death’s resting places. Even in the quietest and most lonely spots, the dead are present (54).

Page 14: Thanatopsis - William Cullen Bryant

What happens to those that die without friends?

• Not alone, have death in common with the human race. Even those that continue to laugh, brood, cry or chase phantoms after your death will one day die and join you.

Page 15: Thanatopsis - William Cullen Bryant

• Death is gentle, kindly, non-violent, in joining together human kind with ancestors and beauty of nature. Humans give up individuality and become a part of a larger whole.

Page 16: Thanatopsis - William Cullen Bryant

Images of the afterlife and death appear:•Death as the innumerable caravan•Afterlife is the mysterious realm.

Page 17: Thanatopsis - William Cullen Bryant

Understanding and accepting death = no fear. •People should look forward to a peaceful afterlife without expecting the heaven promised in religion.•Everyone is equal in death

Page 18: Thanatopsis - William Cullen Bryant

• Live fully while you can, but when the time comes for you to join all those who have died before you, you can meet death serenely, like a person who is about to settle down to a peaceful nap.