Ever imagined what your last words in life would be?
Would you impart a final piece of wisdom to your family like Bob Marley? Or you could take a leaf out of Oscar Wildeâs book and make one last memorable witticism.For most of us, itâs unlikely weâve got a perfect one-liner in mind for our final moments, but thereâs no doubt that weâre fascinated by the parting lines of our cultural and historical heroes.It may be impossible to sum up an extraordinary life in just a few words, but it might just surprise you how these 11 famous names bid a final adieu.
1 âMoney canât buy lifeâ â Bob Marley
The Jamaican musician and pioneer of reggae spoke these words to his son, Ziggy, before he died of cancer in 1981, aged 36.
2 âLast words are for fools who havenât said enoughâ â Karl Marx
These were the last words shouted by the German philosopher to his housekeeper in 1883, after she asked if he had anything he wanted to say.
3 âI hope the exit is joyful and hope never to returnâ â Frida Kahlo
The iconic Mexican artist, renowned for her ground-breaking self portrait series, recorded this final sentiment in her personal diary a few days before her death in 1954.
4 âDammit, donât you dare ask God to help meâ â Joan Crawford
The parting shot of formidable Hollywood legend Joan Crawford was aimed at her housekeeper, who had begun praying aloud at the actorâs bedside.
5 âIâm bored with it allâ â Winston Churchill
Never one to mince his words, the Prime Minister who led Britain through World War Two kept things to the point.
6 âIâm going, but Iâm going in the name of the Lordâ â Bessie Smith
Lauded as âThe Empress of the Bluesâ, Smith was one of the most celebrated and beloved singers of the 1920s and 30s before her death in 1937.
7 âAll my possessions for a moment of time!â â Queen Elizabeth I
A humbling reminder that even a queen must bow to the passage of time. The 16th century monarch died at 70 years of age before being interred at Westminster Abbey in London.
8 âGoodnight my darlings, Iâll see you tomorrowâ â Noel Coward
The playwright died peacefully in his sleep at his home in Jamaica in 1974, after an evening with friends. A memorial stone was unveiled in Poetâs Corner at Westminster Abbey by the Queen Mother who said: âI came because he was my friend.â
9 âOh, I am not going to die, am I? He will not separate us, we have been so happyâ â Charlotte BrontĂ«
This haunting lament from one of the most celebrated novelists of the nineteenth century was shared with the writerâs husband, Arthur Bell Nichols. The couple were married less than a year when BrontĂ« died in 1855.
10 âA life is like a garden, perfect moments can be had, but not preserved, except in memory. LLAPâ â Leonard Nimoy
The beloved Star Trek actor delivered this final thought to the Twittersphere a few days before his death in 2015. âLLAPâ is shorthand for âLive long and prosperâ, the classic catchphrase of Nimoyâs TV alter-ego, Spock.
11 âMy wallpaper and I are fighting a duel to the death. One or the other of us has to goâ â Oscar Wilde
Witty to the end, the Irish playwright and novelist is reported to have spoken these words to friends in the weeks leading up to his death in 1900.
Lastly but not least we have Riky Rick whose last words were âThis rope is killing meâ