“What is man’s life but love, love of self;
Man is dust, dust as his passion, dust as the beloved.Death, it is your great act of piety for man –
You take him to your house or he’d be left to himself.Death is a covenant between the lover and the beloved;
Death is a secret wedlock between being and non-being.Death harbors the hidden port of life’s ocean;
Death is helpless and a vision of beauty to itself.Death is the only witness of my life and your grace,
And O strange lord, of night and the crescent.”
Death, st. 8-12
Help us to complete the source, original and additional information
Ghani Khan 5
Pakistani poet 1914–1996Related quotes

(17th December 1825) Poetic Fragmants - Fifth Series
The London Literary Gazette, 1825
“Do you love your country? […] This man, with his life, has preserved it. Bear him with honor.”
Orontes (Handing over Xeones' corpse to Athenian civilians) p. 430
Gates of Fire (1998)

“But when the dust has drawn up the blood of a man, once he is dead, there is no return to life.”
Source: Oresteia (458 BC), Eumenides, lines 647–648 (tr. Herbert Weir Smyth)

Source: The Complex Vision (1920), Chapter I
Context: This swallowing up of life in nothingness, this obliteration of life by nothingness is what the emotion of malice ultimately desires. The eternal conflict between love and malice is the eternal contest between life and death. And this contest is what the complex vision reveals, as it moves from darkness to darkness.

“Dust, who is not dust? I am dust. But I am your Member of Parliament, nevertheless.”
Bui Arland
Atómstöðin (The Atom Station) (1948)