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Everything comes to an end
Everything comes to an end





It must be remarked that Bavarian trains, as well as other affairs, make a specialty of being behind time. In 1894 a music magazine printed a version with a Bavarian setting : Here are additional selected citations in chronological order.Īs noted above this type of quip was in circulation in the English language by 1886. Note that Twain died in 1910, so this is a very late piece of evidence. The earliest Cincinnati-based citation found by QI was dated 1978, and the words were attributed to Mark Twain. The humor was credited to a variety of people including: Heinrich Heine, Otto von Bismarck, Mark Twain, and George Bernard Shaw. The remark was modified to target other locales, e.g., Dresden, Netherlands, Mecklenburg, Cincinnati and Ireland. Over a period of many decades multiple variants appeared. This citation suggests that a version of this gag expressed in the German language probably predates 1886.

everything comes to an end

The Bavarians will be behind the times even as to the point when time shall be no more, and will enter as laggards upon the eternal life.

everything comes to an end

It is a common saying in Germany that Bavaria will be the best place to emigrate to at the approaching end of the world, since that event, like everything else, will be sure to come off there fifty years later than in any other country. In 1886 The Atlantic Monthly printed an article about King Ludwig II of Bavaria that contained a version of the jape however, the length of the time lag and the location were distinct : Quote Investigator: The early evidence located by QI points to a different part of the globe. When the end of the world comes, I want to be in Cincinnati because it’s always 20 years behind the times.īut this quip is also attributed to the popular humorist Will Rogers.

everything comes to an end everything comes to an end

Mark Twain? Heinrich Heine? Otto von Bismarck? George Bernard Shaw? James Boswell? Will Rogers?ĭear Quote Investigator: As a one-time resident of Cincinnati I knew that Mark Twain once worked in the city, and I always enjoyed the comment he reportedly made about it:







Everything comes to an end