20 March 2012

Last words, famous and otherwise

The Art of Manliness has this:
We've always been intrigued by the last words of others. What did a person use his final mortal breaths to utter? What were they thinking about? Were they scared as they glimpsed the great beyond? Or did they brace up and stoically give up the ghost?
The following sixteen men looked death in the eye and embraced whatever came next.
Rico says he has no idea what his last words will be, but he likes Kit Carson's...


The 80-year-old Giles Corey was accused of sorcery during the Salem witchcraft trials of 1692, but refused to enter a plea to the court. As punishment, he was laid naked in a pit in a field, and slowly pressed to death over two days. Heavy rocks were gradually placed upon his chest, but he refused to cry out in pain, or enter a plea, and each time he was asked to do so, he simply replied: "More weight."


During the War of 1812, Lawrence's ship, the USS Chesapeake, engaged in battle with the Royal Navy's HMS Shannon. The captain was mortally wounded by small arms fire, but encouraged his men to keep up the fight. His order became a popular naval battle cry.

These were Childers' last words to his firing squad before he was executed in 1922, during the Irish Civil War.

Thomas Becket (also known as Saint Thomas of Canterbury, Thomas of London, and, later, Thomas à Becket; circa 1118 to 29 December 1170) was Archbishop of Canterbury from 1162 until his murder in 1170. He is venerated as a saint and martyr by both the Catholic Church and the Anglican Communion. He engaged in conflict with Henry II of England over the rights and privileges of the Church and was murdered by followers of the king in Canterbury Cathedral. Soon after his death, he was canonized by Pope Alexander III.



Thomas More was tried and executed for treason in 1535 because he wouldn't support the annulment  of King Henry VIII's marriage, and denied that the King was the head of the Church. Before being beheaded, he said his last words in reference to his beard, and he positioned his beard on the executioner's block so that it wouldn't be harmed while he was beheaded.


On the eight-hundred-mile return trip of Robert Falcon Scott's unsuccessful attempt to be the first to reach the South Pole, his team desperately slogged through freezing temperatures and blizzards, trying to stay on schedule and reach the supply depots along the way. Oates' feet were badly frostbitten, and he was slowing down the rest of the men. He volunteered to be left behind, but his comrades refused to leave him. So finally he simply walked outside his tent and into a blizzard, telling the others: "I am just going outside. I may be some time."


In order to keep the passengers and crew calm, Hartley and his fellow band members continued to play as the Titanic sank. When the last lifeboats had been loaded, the musicians grabbed the railing on top the Grand Staircase's deckhouse, and Hartley said this farewell to them just before a wave hit and washed him overboard.


Patton died in 1945, right before leaving Europe. He was in a car accident, en route to a hunting excursion, that left him paralyzed from the neck down. He lingered in a hospital in spinal traction for twelve days, which was not the kind of glorious death the lifetime soldier had imagined for himself.

Passionate about the idea of manned flight, Otto Lilienthal was known as the Glider King, and made over two thousand flights in glider models he designed himself. But, in 1896, his glider stalled, and he fell fifty feet, critically fracturing his spine. His last words were to his brother before he succumbed to his injury.

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