Re: Heidegger and death

" Death. Death is what touches mortals in their nature, and so sets them
on their way to the other side of life, and so into the whole of the pure
draft. Death thus gathers into the whole of what is already posited, into
the 'postium' of the whole draft. As this gathering of the positing, death
is the laying-down, the Law, just as the mountain chain is the gathering of
the mountains into the whole of its chain. " ("What are poets for?")


death : m o[r]t jus te (jab=E8s?)

the (br)other side :
m or(t) als -- di vin i ties
p

the cadaver, a jug of red wine, gushes a/way...


" As the shrine of Being, death is the shelter of Being.... Mortals are
who they are, as mortals, present in the shelter of Being. They are the
presencing relation to Being as Being. " ("The Thing")


i/mage <of> death : (blanchot)
wanderring . . .
out/side of the event


" In death the supreme concealedness of Being crystallizes.
Death has already overtaken every dying. " ("Language")


yet cryst al shat ters,
frag tures too




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