Like Sands Through the Hourglass
"At the end of the day," a
Wall Street Journal editorial writer observed recently about campaign
reform, "we remain skeptics, less so of McCain-Feingold than of its advocates'
professions of nonpartisanship." "At the end of the day," the Financial
Times noted a few weeks ago, after the European Union voted once again to
keep Turkey at arm's length, "it is a greater loss to Europe than it will ever
be for Turkey." "At the end of the day," a sportswriter for the Milwaukee
Journal Sentinel presciently pointed out in advance of professional
football's 1998 championship game, "what the AFC primarily has going for it in
the Super Bowl is the law of averages."
What is
this "day" that everyone is referring to? It is not so much a unit of time as a
unit of consummation, and it highlights, in a way, our larger confusion about
what chronological time is and what measuring it is good for.
The planet's most accurate time is kept by an atomic clock
maintained at the U.S. Naval Observatory in Washington, D.C. The clock is so
accurate that every so often the time must be adjusted by adding a "leap
second" to account for the gradual, if modest, slowing of the Earth's rotation.
(This last happened on June 30, 1997. It will need to happen again sometime
next year.) The idea that time's passage has an objective dimension connected
with diurnal rhythms is, of course, increasingly quaint, and may eventually
become obsolete. Isaac Asimov, in his futuristic Foundation Trilogy
novels, imagined a thickly settled universe where the familiar "24-hour day" is
an accepted convention, presumably based on the rotation of humanity's planet
of origin--but where no one remembers any longer what the original planet
was.
In
language, too, time seems to have got out of hand. Temporal language often
depicts the passage of time not merely as fast, relentless, and irrevocable but
also, more and more, as conceptually slippery. The term our times and
its portentous relative our time (as in "one of the most important
movies/books/recordings of our time ") are rhetorically vast but
temporally indeterminate, even as they become trivialized by overuse. (One
Texas newspaper not long ago called Henry Cisneros, the former secretary of
Housing and Urban Development now under indictment, "the most skilled
politician of our times.") Decent interval , another modern standby, is
an interval whose length no mechanical or atomic clock can measure; the only
instrumentation that works is emotional. The Wall Street Journal 's G.
Paschal Zachary observed last September that America, or at least American
journalism, was awash in defining moments (you know, the Gulf War, the
Rodney King beating, the death of Diana). At this point in time , a
legacy of Watergate, seems to be unequivocally specific, but of course the
subtext is that time is fluid, that circumstances change, and that truth could
be different a little later on.
By comparison, at the end of the day ,
with the sense of "when all is said and done" or "eventually" or "in the
fullness of time," has a shapeliness and finality about it. It has been waxing
in popularity since the early 1970s. The term's proximate origin remains
obscure--some analysts have suggested an association with the world of sport or
finance, where activities are indeed governed by an actual daily cycle and
where a metaphoric sense could easily have arisen out of the literal one. As
listeners to the BBC World Service can attest, the usage has become widespread
in the English spoken throughout the British Commonwealth. An Australian
politician last December: "At the end of the day, the Australian people will
decide whether or not this country becomes a republic." A Kenyan politician,
also last December: "At the end of the day, the ethnic consideration will rule
the day." The Chicago Tribune columnist Eric Zorn has theorized that the
utility of at the end of the day has been augmented by the various
unresolved episodes lumped under the word "Whitewater," which call for an
economical way of expressing the thought "when things finally get straightened
out ..."
Robert W.
Burchfield, the longtime editor of the Oxford English Dictionary , treats
the phrase with magisterial derision in The New Fowler's Modern English
Usage (1996)--he dismisses it as "one of the ignoble clichés introduced
into the language in the 20c. (first recorded in 1974)." And yet the phrase,
though lately putting in overtime, is not so young. The Random House
lexicographer Jesse Sheidlower has found a reference to it in a passage from
Varieties of Religious Experience , in which William James quotes words
of Voltaire, for which he gives the date 1773: "All comes out at the end of the
day, and all comes out still more even when all the days are over." That
quotation itself calls attention to apocalyptic antecedents in the Bible, where
the end of the days or the last days , meaning "the end of the
world," is often much on people's minds. Thus, from the prophet Joel: "And in
the last days it shall be, God declares, that I will pour out my Spirit on all
flesh" (Acts 2:17). And the Lord says to the prophet Daniel, "You shall rest,
and shall stand in your allotted place at the end of the days" (Daniel
12:13).
Any cant word or phrase becomes tiresome, which perhaps
accounts in part for Burchfield's impatience with at the end of the day .
(The word parse , rapidly deployed in press conferences and commentary
after President Clinton used an eyebrow-raising tense to describe his
relationship with Monica Lewinsky, went from inert silage to spent husk in a
matter of hours.) At the end of the day has its good and bad points.
Among the bad: It imposes an implicit template of struggle and confrontation
where none may exist. It also implies the inevitability of resolution. The good
points include its realism: Even as it invokes the traditional language of
time, it does not in fact insist on squeezing events into a rigid chronological
mold. (In contrast, consider the false concept of the week , which James
Fallows in Breaking the News castigated for having become "the basic
unit of political time," a status ruthlessly enforced by the weekly schedule of
political talk shows.) Also, the whiff of eschatology that the phrase exudes is
not inappropriate to the millennium's approach.
Are its days numbered?
William Safire, who once addressed the phrase in passing, seemed to think it a
nonce expression, enjoying an ephemeral vogue. That was a decade ago. Those
inhabiting English's linguistic core may find the phrase cloying, but its
popularity in finance and sport, and in the English spoken by non-native
speakers, suggests that its colonizing power remains robust. My guess is that
it will achieve, at the very least, a kind of status that is going to be
conferred on more and more English locutions as time goes on: the status of a
native idiomatic expression whose constituency is in fact an international
group of English speakers. At the end of the day, its best days lie ahead.