Last words
Last words or final words are a person's final articulated words said prior to death or as death approaches.
Quotations of last words may not be the words spoken immediately before death, as these tend to reflect the mode of death.[citation needed] Last words may not be written down and accurately recorded, and they may not be quoted accurately for a variety of reasons.
Famous last words include both the literal sense such as the sayings of Jesus on the cross, "Et tu, Brute?" from Shakespeare's Julius Caesar, and Oscar Wilde's "My wallpaper and I are fighting a duel to the death. One or the other of us has to go", and the ironical sense of words said before a disaster, such as:
- "They couldn't hit an elephant at this dist...", General John Sedgwick at the Battle of Spotsylvania Court House immediately before being killed by enemy fire.
- "Let all brave Prussians follow me!", Field Marshal Kurt Christoph Graf von Schwerin at the Battle of Prague, immediately after that getting hit in the head by a cannonball.
- "Don't worry, it's not loaded", Terry Kath of the band Chicago
The last words reported to have been uttered by a person revered as a martyr or hero of a religious, nationalist, or revolutionary movement often gain a political significance and are extensively quoted in later literature and/or used as a slogan. However, in many such cases their historical authenticity is doubted.[citation needed]
See also
- Final statement, or gallows speech, often afforded to a prisoner about to be executed
- Death poem
References
External links
Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to: Last words |
Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to: Fictional last words |
- 20 Badass Famous Last Words by Pop Crunch
- Lastword.at