The line "Cowards die many times before their deaths; The valiant never taste of death but once" is from William Shakespeare's play "Julius Caesar."
fred rose.. denver darling sung it
Roald Dahl wrote it just before his death in 1990; it was published in 1991.
Tchaikovsky wrote the symphony in 1893. It was premiered just a week before his death.
The line is often quoted as "A coward dies a thousand deaths, but the valiant taste death but once."The actual quote is from Act 1, Scene 2, Line 32 of "Julius Cesear", written by William Shakespeare:Julius Caesar: Cowards die many times before their deaths;The valiant never taste of death but once.
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
The death poem, also known as jisei in Japanese, was often written by people in Japan before their death. These poems were a way to express their thoughts or emotions before passing away.
The exact quote is "Death has many times invited me: it was like the salt invisible in the waves," and it is by Pablo Neruda.
D.J. MacHale wrote "The Merchant of Death."
wolfgang amadeus
Fortunately, Shakespeare's life was completely chronological: he was not married before he was born or wrote his plays after his death. He did things in chronological order: born, married, wrote plays and died. (If you are an Oxfordian, you do believe that he wrote after his death, but Oxfordians don't count.)
I believe II Timothy is the last book he wrote before his death. History tells us he was beheaded, not the Bible.