"I did not get my Spaghetti-O's, I got spaghetti. I want the press to know this."
You would have thought that convicted murderer Thomas Grasso had more important things on his mind than spaghetti. He was after all about to be executed by lethal injection. It is entirely possible that he was about to say something else, perhaps go on to give an eloquent explanation about how he was using the spaghetti incident as a metaphore in a wider statement concerning the general treatment of deathrow prisoners, but unfortunately at that point he snuffed it. His concluding remark therefore leaves us with the impression of a man who, given the full and undivided attention of the world's media, chose to moan about his dinner.
Only your parents will remember your first faltering words, unless of course you happen to be a gorilla taking part in a groundbreaking scientific research programme, in which case your epochal request for 'more nanas pease' will probably be international news. The rest of us usually have to rely on the memory of a parent, which given the number of times my own mother inexplicably leaves her spectacles in the fridge, may not be all that reliable. However, potentially at least, the rest of eternity may recall the last thing you ever say. With that in mind it is probably worth preparing a little something in advance, something short and snappy and easily recalled in a moment of duress. A moment of duress being those final seconds before you expire, naturally. Or even unnaturally, as was the fate of Benjamin Dodd, a lifelong petty thief and eventual forger who was hanged in 1712. On the gallows he gamely invited anyone in the crowd to, "Swap places for the gold coin sewn inside my waistcoat." Unsurprisingly not a single member of the assembled mob took him up on the offer, and Dodd was swiftly hanged. And robbed.
All the same, it shows that Dodd was thinking on his feet well before being hoisted off his them. He found something to say, something he felt was important, if a trifle ambitious. In fact condemned criminals - along with withering poets - are the masters of the melodramatic adieu. When mother and daughter Elizabeth and Mary Branch were brought to the gallows for the murder of a servant girl in 1740, they each made an address of such tedious verbosity that many in the rowdy mob of assembled raggamuffins stretched out and asked to be woke for the finale.
Meanwhile Harry Harbord Morant, an Australian poet, bushman, hero, and occasional murderer, is remembered for urging his firing squad from the Cameron Highlanders regiment to, "Shoot straight, you bastards - don't make a mess of it!" and thoughtful to a man, they obliged. So it wasn't exactly poetry (but then again, Morant was an apauling poet. The opening verse of his final ditty, penned from his cell in South Africa, should possibly have earned him a place in front of a second firing squad: In prison cell I sadly sit/ A dammed crestfallen chappie/ And own to you I feel a bit/ A little bit unhappy), but it does demonstrate a commitment to the cause, that being to be immortalised in any number of magazine articles and circulating e-mails.
Providing office workers with light relief was probably the furthest thing from the mind of Gunpowder Plot co-conspiritor Everard Digby as his heart was cut out of his still-living body and displayed before a baying crowd. Well it would be wouldn't it? However, when the executioner called out, "Behold - the heart of a traitor!" Digby sent giggles rippling through countless Human Resources departments centuries in the future by indignantly responding, "Oooh, thou liest!"
Indeed condemnded criminals can often be relied upon to bring a much-needed chuckle to an otherwise solemn occasion. Unlike Everard Digby, poisoner William Palmer probably had his tongue firmly in his cheek when he stepped onto the trapdoor of the gallows and queried of the hangman, "Are you sure this is safe?" and James Rodgers, who was asked whether he had a last request before facing a line of rifles, was not seriously hopeful when he replied: "Why yes - a bulletproof vest!"
The irksome thing about death is that it so often occurs in the middle of a sentence, as Major General John Sedgwick disovered at the battle of Spotsylvania in 1864, moments before he was felled by a sniper: "They couldn't hit an elephant at this dist-"
Therein lies another problem. If you don't go out with a bang, a whimper, a song or a wisecrack - or even if your timing is just memorably unfortunate: "I am still alive!" the emporer Caligula reported triumphantly, as he was being stabbed to death by his own guards - you run the risk of having something attributed post mortem. The truth is that Sedgewick was killed hours after scoffing at the acuracy of his enemy's snipers. For all we know his very final words may have been something completely ordinary, but how many people would have heard of Sedgwick had his last words been faithfully recorded as: "Simon, is there any more tea in that pot?" Forget that he was the most senior officer killed in the American civil war - mere facts don't bring a man the level of immortality that a piece of humourous trivia can. If French grammarian Dominic Bouhours really did take a last shuddering breath and whisper: "I am about to - or I am going to - die; either expression is correct." I will eat a Pot Noodle.
Let me quickly add one final note of warning, least my roof suddenly collapse and I be remembered as the man whose last words were 'Pot Noodle'. Never tempt fate - it bites, as Canadian tourist John Murdoch, who excitedly urged his wife to, "Get a picture of me with the bear," found out to his great cost. There is little more the Hand of Fate can do after a line such as that other than give you a fatal mauling. That is just the way of these things. Or as the legendary Aussie outlaw Ned Kelly concluded: "Such is life."
Published by Gary james
Gary James is 38 and lives in the UK. When he isn't writing or sliding around his new wooden floors in his socks, he walks tiring distances all over Yorkshire for no sensible reason anyone can come up with. View profile
Vincent Van Gogh's Last Physician: Doctor Paul GachetA look at the last weeks of Vincent van Gogh's life and the man who treated him during this time.- The Last Day on EarthFlash fiction about a man's last day on earth.
- The Top Ten Billy Joel Songs You've Probably Never HeardUnless you've been under a rock for the last thirty years you know his radio hits, but take a moment to rediscover the genius of this American music icon.
Almost Famous Entertains and InspiresUnassuming hilarity, witty quips, and fully-developed characters from a star-studded cast will carry you through the exciting and intense world of 1970s era rock stars, rock jou...
- Hedley - Famous Last Words
- Famous Last Words: "Go Raiders!"
- Famous Tombstone Epitaphs and Last Words
- Famous Last Words of the Family Dining Experience
- Brown vs. Coakley - the Circular Firing Squad is Formed
- Pregnant British Samantha Orobator Faces Possible Execution by Firing Squad
- The Haunting of the Hale Family Homestead in Coventry, Connecticut
- More strange and wonderful things of little value can be found at thebigsideorder.blogspot.com/

1 Comments
Post a Commentconvicted murderer Thomas Grasso last words "I did not get my Spaghetti-O's, I got spaghetti. I want the press to know this." ment that when he was a child he did not get to say the little O's that all childern say when they say (Ohh WOW or Ohhh K mommy daddy)when childern do somthing new and little. his parents talked to him and coldly said to him as a little boy spaghetti!!! he felt gity that his parents had to feed him and shame.But still abuse does not give you the right to kill.