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