The phrase that Neil Gaiman said supports the poem's theme because it talks about the democracy in all people, no matter skin color, amount of money, height, weight, etc. he said that the death is the great democracy because even do when you are alive you can be rich or handsome but at the end you will die as anyone else, carried by horses in your tomb. You can make fun of poor people or insult them or anything because you think you are better than other persons but the great democracy of the death will make you pay, because you won't be treated differently when you die just because you have a lot of money. You as many other persons, could be rich people, poor people, ugly guys, handsome persons, you can be stupid or intelligent but when the moment arrives all of us will die in the same way. We will be carried by some horses in our tomb in our way to the graveyard. So it doesn't really matter how rich or poor you are, or if you think that you are more important or better than someone, at the end of the story we all are in the same place. Because all of this, the statement or phrase that Gaiman said supports the theme of the poem because it talks about the democracy that takes place in the poem, at the end it says that when you die it doesn't matter anything, you will be carried by horses in your tomb.
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