Last-ditch effort/stand

Origin of: Last-ditch effort/stand

Last-ditch effort/stand

One final, desperate attempt or defence dates from the late 17th century and derives from the military sense of a ditch or trench being the last line of defence. It is attributed to William III, Prince of Orange, who according to Hume’s History of England (1757) once said, “I can be sure never to see my country’s ruin: I will die in the last ditch.”