“Sutton sensed resurrection and he fought against it, for death was so comfortable. Like a soft, warm bed. And resurrection was a strident, insistent, maddening alarm clock that shrilled across the predawn chill of a dreadful, frowzy room. Dreadful with its life and its bare reality and its sharp, sickening reminder that one must get up and walk into reality again.”
Source: Time and Again (1951), Chapter XXVIII (p. 143)
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Clifford D. Simak 137
American writer, journalist 1904–1988Related quotes
Source: Dictionary of Burning Words of Brilliant Writers (1895), P. 519.

“The goal of human life is not death but resurrection.”
"Witness to an Ancient Truth" (1962)

"The Death of Me", p. 150
Awareness (1992)
Context: One of your American authors put it so well. He said awakening is the death of your belief in injustice and tragedy. The end of the world for a caterpillar is a butterfly for the master. Death is resurrection. We're talking not about some resurrection that will happen but about one that is happening right now. If you would die to the past, if you would die to every minute, you would be the person who is fully alive, because a fully alive person is one who is full of death. We're always dying to things. We're always shedding everything in order to be fully alive and resurrected at every moment. The mystics, saints, and others make great efforts to wake people up. If they don't wake up, they're always going to have these other minor ills like hunger, wars, and violence. The greatest evil is sleeping people, ignorant people.

(29th September 1832) On the death of Sir Walter Scott
The London Literary Gazette, 1832
“I'm going to get you a broken alarm clock so you'll get up in the morning.”
The Osbournes television show.