The term actually came from Gulliver's Travels, but was adopted to summarise the seemingly arbitrary difference in number representation in computers:
The origin of the odd terms big endian
and little endian can be traced to the
1726 book Gulliver's Travels, by
Jonathan Swift. In one part of the
story, resistance to an imperial edict
to break soft-boiled eggs on the
"little end" escalates to civil war.
(The plot is a satire of England's
King Henry VIII's break with the
Catholic Church.) A few hundred years
later, in 1981, Danny Cohen applied
the terms and the satire to our
current situation in IEEE Computer
(vol. 14, no. 10).
http://www.netrino.com/node/149