In my case I was talking about a politician and a intellectual. They weren't dying, actually both of them are very much alive. But they are elderly and you just don't know if you are going to die next year or live on for ten years or more.
It was not that much about dying itself, but about their career, their responsibility, being over.
Actually, with the memorial days of the WII being finished today in my country, there was also a report on TV about a british jewish man, aged 95, who lived in Holland during the war and he was one of only two men who survived the transport of 700 Jews from Westerbork in Holland to Auschwitz. He talked about educating children and teenagers at schools, his help to a museum and his 'battle' against the neo-nazi's.
Maybe old men become children again, no macho feelings and a lot of wisdom. Sure, bitterness is sometimes assosiated with being or becomming an elderly person. But some people can avoid this. That is a virtue and something inspiring to me as a young person.