The epitaph of the Irish poet Yates is the last seventeen words of a poem he wrote on the eve of his death: "Look at life and death coldly, and the knight will pass by."
The epitaph of the great writer Bernard Shaw wrote, "I always knew that this kind of thing would happen no matter how long I lived."
The tombstone of Italian painter Raphael reads: "Living, naturally afraid that he will surpass his works; It's dead, I'm afraid it's dead. "
The epitaph of French writer Stendhal reads: "Henri Bell of Milan is buried here. He used to live, write and fall in love. "
Voltaire, the author of Philosophical Correspondence and epic Henry V, naturally occupies a seat in the pantheon dedicated to the burial of great men, and is known as "a poet, historian and philosopher. He has expanded the human spirit and made him understand that it should be free."
The epitaph of aristophanes, the "father of comedy" in ancient Greece, was written by the philosopher Plato: "Melody was looking for an immortal palace and finally found it in Fu Ling, aristophanes."