It's become a part of our common lexicon, and was a favorite of the Bard. Not "Always", not "Ever", "Till Kingdom Come", nor even "Till the Bovines Return to their Domicile" (okay that last one we made up). No, we trace Shakespeare's many uses of the phrase "Forever and a Day," and it's subsequent usage in popular culture.
It's become a part of our common lexicon, and was a favorite of the Bard. Not "Always", not "Ever", "Till Kingdom Come", nor even "Till the Bovines Return to their Domicile" (okay that last one we made up). No, we trace Shakespeare's many uses of the phrase "Forever and a Day," and it's subsequent usage in popular culture.