Deaths
- January 19 – Percy Herbert, 2nd Baron Powis, nobleman and writer (born 1598)
- March 16 (or 17) – Philippe Labbe, Jesuit writer (born 1607)
- May 2 – George Wither, poet (born 1588)
- May 14 – Georges de Scudéry, poet (born 1601)
- July 28 – Abraham Cowley, poet (born 1618)
- August 13 – Jeremy Taylor, author (born 1613)
- November – Grigory Kotoshikhin, diplomat and writer (born 1630; executed for murder)
Read more about this topic: 1667 In Literature
Famous quotes containing the word deaths:
“As deaths have accumulated I have begun to think of life and death as a set of balance scales. When one is young, the scale is heavily tipped toward the living. With the first death, the first consciousness of death, the counter scale begins to fall. Death by death, the scales shift weight until what was unthinkable becomes merely a matter of gravity and the fall into death becomes an easy step.”
—Alison Hawthorne Deming (b. 1946)
“This is the 184th Demonstration.
...
What we do is not beautiful
hurts no one makes no one desperate
we do not break the panes of safety glass
stretching between people on the street
and the deaths they hire.”
—Marge Piercy (b. 1936)
“There is the guilt all soldiers feel for having broken the taboo against killing, a guilt as old as war itself. Add to this the soldiers sense of shame for having fought in actions that resulted, indirectly or directly, in the deaths of civilians. Then pile on top of that an attitude of social opprobrium, an attitude that made the fighting man feel personally morally responsible for the war, and you get your proverbial walking time bomb.”
—Philip Caputo (b. 1941)