Welcome back, friends!

Last week I wrote about how English turns emotional intimacy into a transaction—how we “make” and “build” friendships as if they were products. This week, as we reach the final essay from the May 2025 Paper 2 series, I’ve been thinking about how English handles the opposite end of the spectrum: how we talk about endings. We have this odd linguistic habit of softening finality with vague qualifiers. We say “one of the last times” or “probably the last” as if hedging our bets against the universe. We say “see you later” when we mean “goodbye forever” because “later” feels less permanent, less like a door closing. But here’s the strange thing: when we do use the word “last” without qualification—”the last time,” “the last one”—it gains this terrible weight. It stops being temporal and becomes almost ceremonial. English reserves unqualified finality for moments that demand acknowledgment: last words, last rites, last chances. The word becomes a spotlight, forcing us to recognize what we’re usually too comfortable ignoring: that everything ends, and the ending matters precisely because we know it’s happening.

This week’s essay prompt: “Write a story with the title, ‘The last one’.“; it’s question 5 from Variant 3 of the May 2025 Paper 2 series—and yes, this is the last one from May 2025!

Here’s what makes this title both generous and demanding: it gives you total freedom (the last what? the last when? the last to whom?) while simultaneously locking you into a structure. Everything in your story must orbit that word “last,” must justify why this particular moment, object, or person deserves that designation. Most students will interpret “last” as simple chronology—the final item in a sequence, the end of a list. But the strongest narratives understand that “last” isn’t just temporal; it’s moral and emotional. Something becomes “the last one” not just because it comes after everything else, but because it carries the accumulated weight of everything that came before. Can you write a story where “the last dose of medicine” also means “the last mercy we can offer”? Where “the last person remaining” also interrogates what it costs to be the one left behind? The title tests whether you understand that finality transforms meaning—the last conversation is different from all previous conversations precisely because both people know there won’t be another. This is narrative as archaeology: you’re not just telling what happens at the end; you’re revealing why the end redefines everything that led to it. The challenge is making us feel the weight of “last” without announcing it, showing us through character, consequence, and choice why this moment couldn’t be any other position in the sequence.

You’ll find the essay here!

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More coming soon! See you guys in the next one!

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