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'Twas ever thus

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Bonzo 2000 | 14:22 Fri 15th Oct 2004 | Phrases & Sayings
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Is this saying credited to a particular writer or character?
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Sherlock Holmes utters it twice in the Hound of the Baskervilles and I think that is the origin.

It's older than Conan Doyle I'm afraid.  Dickens uses it in the Old Curiosity Shop and the Countess of Winchelsea (17th century) uses a version in a poem in a way that suggests it was already a common phrase.

Sorry I can't tell you where it is from though - I've always assumed it was either Shakespeare or from Shakespeare's time but I'm sure someone on here will put me right!

There' s a longer version too - twas ever thus, and thus 'twill ever be.

Didnt Margaret Thatcher say it on her way out of Downing Street in 1990?

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'Twas ever thus

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