Exam dates 2018

EXAM DATES 2018

GCSE English:
Paper 1 - 5 June 2018 am
Paper 2 - 8 June 2018 am

A2 Communication & Culture:
Wed 6 June 2018 am

Monday 29 February 2016

Please Hold - blog post by Payal & Jess

‘Please Hold’

The literal meaning of ‘Please Hold’ is about a man who is losing his patience when he is on the phone as he finds himself continuously talking to a voice mail machine. He gets angrier by the minute yet his wife is explaining to him this is the way things are nowadays. I think that the in depth meaning of the poem is about the future and how it is expensive as everything revolves around technology and this male speaker happens to be old fashioned with his ways and has not accepted robots, machines and other sources of technology; therefore, I think this poem is a way of him expressing his worries and concerns about the future. He mimics the voice mail and all its ‘countless options’ but implies that with whatever answer you give it takes you to a ‘dead end’ this creates the idea of voice mails being like mazes, which shows that the speaker finds this new technology confusing.

The structure of this poem is very irregular. There are 2 stanzas of which contain different amounts of lines. The first stanza is much longer than the second it contains 50 lines whereas the final stanza contains only 3 lines. The long stanza could be to exaggerate how voice mails are long and never ending just like the stanza. It could also show how passionate the writer is about this topic. That he is so angry that he is continuously writing more and his hate for technology is never-ending.
The language used in ‘Please Hold’ is informal as though it’s spoken. For instance, ‘I’m talking to a robot’ suggests the speaker is explaining the event to the reader. However, the reader can understand it’s literally a mental rant. It’s more the tone that is significant as it’s sarcastic using dry humour, common to this Irish poet. This tone may be to emphasise how relatable the poem is and the point of this poem that the evolution of technology reduces humanity.

He uses a lot of repetition perhaps to mimic the voice mail as they often repeat themselves or also to show that he has heard these phrases numerous times and has now memorised them. He often repeats the saying, ‘my wife says, this is the future’; this could be to show that all he ever hears is his wife telling him this is the future now because technology is improving day by day and something new is invented everyday. He then compares the agent on the phone to a robot. Implying that even if they passed the phone through to a real person whatever they say will be scripted just like the robot. There is no real conversation and once again he thinks that ‘this is the future’.

One important feature of this poem is the repetition of the German phrase ‘Eine Kleine Nachtmusik’ (or ‘A Little Night Music’). It is a popular piece of classical music by Mozart commonly used as ‘holding music’ when one is put on hold. The phrase is used to refer back to the title and the main theme of the poem but also the repetition, and particularly the swearing that breaks the last use of the phrase, is created to accentuate the irritation of the speaker, written by the poet as though the reader is listening to the music themselves.


As the exam will require comparing two poems, it is important to discuss what poems can be linked with ‘Please Hold’. Clearly, one possible link is ‘The Fox in the National Museum of Wales’ as both centre around the approach of the  future. Another poem ‘Please Hold’ could be linked to is Barber’s ‘Material’ as both speakers dislike the loss of humanity and the destruction technology causes. However, both comparative poems lack the same structure as O’Driscoll’s ‘Please Hold’. On a smaller note, a poem one could compare this poem to, in terms of structure, is ‘Effects’ as both speakers express themselves in a conversational manner and both have a irregular pattern- the rhyming of ‘Effects’ and the repetition of ‘Please Hold’.   

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