Next, Please Flashcards

1
Q

How is the title Next, Please significant?

A

The clipped nature of the title conveys our desire to quickly move past the present and onto the future, which we see as filled with promise and wonder.

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2
Q

What different views might we consider in Next, Please?

A
  1. Larkin’s view is separate to society in welcoming death/isolation, considering the only thing next to be death.
  2. Society’s views/expectations, constantly expecting next things rather than appreciating the present.
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3
Q

What main technique does Next, Please use? Why?

A
  • Extended metaphor of a boat to represent the idea of opportunities coming and going.
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4
Q

‘Always too eager for the future, we
Pick up bad habits of expectancy’

A
  • Mocks the way society deceives itself about the future, and lose focus on the present. Distracted by waiting/dwelling on future.
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5
Q

‘Something is always approaching’

A
  • Sense of ambiguity - fool ourselves into believing something significant might happen in the future. Future is imprecise.
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6
Q

‘Till then, we say’

A
  • Lose focus/agency in the present whilst waiting for a future that never comes - mundanity of life.
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7
Q

‘Sparkling armada of promises draw near’

A
  • Metaphor of future as a fleet of ships - opportunities that come and go.
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8
Q

‘How slow they are! And how much time they waste, Refusing to make haste!’

A
  • Hyperbole and Exclamatives - childish impatience and excitement to mock the attitude of society, considering the future to be glorious and exhilarating.
  • Fail to consider the present, and the reality of the future - death.
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9
Q

‘wretched stalks of disappointment’

A
  • Metaphor. Left clinging onto dead, unfulfilled dreams - disappointment and setbacks.
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10
Q

‘leaning with brasswork prinked, Each rope distinct, Flagged, and the figurehead wit golden tits’

A
  • Bathos. Elaborate and elevated image of the future and our expectations for it is reduced to the crude reality of life as trivial and mundane.
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11
Q

‘No sooner present than it turns to past’

A
  • Opportunities/possibilities pass us - foolish of our hopes for unachievable dreams.
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12
Q

‘waiting so devoutly and so long.
But we are wrong’

A
  • End stop separates foolish illusions of society from reality, and emphasises volta.
  • Monosyllabic language - blunt and unavoidable truth.
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13
Q

‘Only one ship is seeking us, a black-
Sailed unfamiliar’

A
  • Refers to death via colour imagery. Contrasts ‘golden tits’ of how we falsely view life, without consideration of death in our futures.
  • ‘Unfamiliar’ - we fail to think / truly accept death. Distract ourselves with what is coming next to avoid facing the bleak reality that our lives are finite / death is in the distance, and so instead focus upon these future opportunities.
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14
Q

‘A huge and birdless silence.’

A
  • Emphasised via caesura. After death, there is nothing, death is an absolute and unavoidable end to all life.
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15
Q

Rhyme Scheme of Next, Please:

A
  • Rhyming couplets - upbeat, childlike tone to suggest society’s naivety and immaturity.
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16
Q

What is Bathos?

A

An abrupt change of tone, perhaps for a comedic effect.