By the end of this chapter you'll be able to…

  • 1Summarise what the poem describes
  • 2Identify the theme of simple summer joys
  • 3Recognise sensory imagery and rhyme in the poem
  • 4Describe the cheerful mood of the poem
  • 5Express personal experiences of summer treats
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Why this chapter matters
'Ice Cream Man' by Rachel Field captures the simple joy of a hot summer day and the arrival of the ice-cream cart. It builds poetry comprehension and an appreciation of sensory imagery, rhyme, and the small delights of childhood.

Before you start — revise these

A 5-minute refresher here will save you 30 minutes of confusion below.

Ice Cream Man — Class 5 English (CBSE)

From the current Class 5 English Marigold textbook. Read the poem for enjoyment, then study the notes to understand the language and meaning.


1. About the poem

'Ice Cream Man' is a poem by Rachel Field. It describes the joy a child feels on a hot summer day when the ice-cream man arrives with his cart. The poem uses vivid sensory imagery — sights, sounds, tastes, and feelings — to bring the scene to life. It captures the simple pleasure of summer, the excitement of choosing a flavour, and the way ice cream cools and refreshes on a scorching day.

2. The poem (summary)

The ice-cream man drives his cart down the street on a hot summer day. Children gather around him eagerly. The man sells different flavours of ice cream — vanilla, chocolate, strawberry. The poem describes how the ice cream looks, how it tastes, and how happy the children are.

The central feeling is one of pure, simple joy. The poet wants readers to remember the small delights of childhood — the taste of ice cream, the sound of the cart bell, and the relief from the summer heat.

3. Theme and values

ThemeExplanation
Joy in simple thingsThe poem shows how small pleasures (like ice cream) can bring great happiness.
Summer and seasonsThe poem captures the experience of summer and how we find ways to stay cool.
Sensory experienceThe poem uses all five senses to describe the ice-cream man's visit.
CommunityChildren gather together, sharing the experience of buying and eating ice cream.
ChildhoodThe poem celebrates the carefree happiness of being a child.

Values to learn

  • Appreciate small joys in everyday life.
  • Share treats and experiences with others.
  • Use your senses to observe the world around you.

4. Poetic devices

Rhyme scheme

The poem follows a regular rhyme scheme (AABB or ABAB in different stanzas). This creates a bouncy, musical rhythm that matches the cheerful mood.

Imagery

The poet uses vivid images:

  • Sight: the colourful cart, the ice-cream man's smile, different flavours.
  • Sound: the bell of the cart, children's laughter.
  • Touch: the cold ice cream on a hot day.
  • Taste: the sweet, cold, creamy flavour of the ice cream.

Repetition

Certain words or sounds are repeated to create rhythm and emphasis.

Alliteration

The repetition of the same sound at the beginning of nearby words (for example, 'summer sun').

5. Key vocabulary

WordMeaning
CartA small vehicle used to sell things on the street
VanillaA flavour for ice cream
ChocolateA brown, sweet flavour for ice cream
StrawberryA red, sweet flavour for ice cream
SummerThe hottest season of the year
RefreshingMaking you feel cool, fresh, and energetic
FlavourThe taste of a food or drink
TreatSomething special that gives pleasure
DelightGreat happiness or pleasure
PileTo put things on top of each other

6. Reading comprehension

Questions to think about while reading

  1. What season is described in the poem?
  2. How do the children feel when they see the ice-cream man?
  3. What flavours of ice cream does the man sell?
  4. Why are the children happy?
  5. How does the poet describe the ice cream?

Understanding the mood

The mood of the poem is happy, excited, and carefree. The poet creates this mood through:

  • Words that suggest joy ('delight', 'happy', 'fun').
  • Descriptions of the hot day and the relief of cold ice cream.
  • The image of children gathering around the ice-cream cart.

7. Writing practice

Prompt 1: Describe your favourite ice-cream flavour. Why do you like it? When do you enjoy eating it?

Prompt 2: Imagine you are an ice-cream seller. Describe your cart — what flavours do you sell, what does your cart look like, and what sounds do you make to attract customers?

Prompt 3: Write four lines about your favourite summer treat (it could be ice cream, cold juice, watermelon, or anything else).

8. Common mistakes

  • Mistake: Confusing the 'flavour' of ice cream with the 'feeling' it gives Fix: Flavour is the taste (vanilla, chocolate). Feeling is the emotion (happy, refreshed).
  • Mistake: Missing the sensory details in the poem Fix: Look for words that describe how things look, sound, taste, feel, and smell.
  • Mistake: Writing only one-word answers for comprehension questions Fix: Write complete sentences. Include a reason or example from the poem.

9. Self-test

  1. Who is the poet of 'Ice Cream Man'?
  2. What season does the poem describe?
  3. Name two flavours of ice cream mentioned in the poem.
  4. How do the children feel when the ice-cream man comes?
  5. Write two pairs of rhyming words from the poem.

10. Answer key

  1. Who is the poet of 'Ice Cream Man'? Answer: The poet is Rachel Field.

  2. What season does the poem describe? Answer: Summer — a hot summer day.

  3. Name two flavours of ice cream mentioned in the poem. Answer: Vanilla and chocolate (or strawberry — any two).

  4. How do the children feel when the ice-cream man comes? Answer: The children feel happy and excited. They gather around his cart with joy.

  5. Write two pairs of rhyming words from the poem. Answer: (Answers will vary based on the poem. Common pairs include 'day/way', 'heat/sweet', 'man/can'.)

11. Quick revision

  • Poet: Rachel Field.
  • Theme: Simple joys of summer, childhood happiness, ice cream as a treat.
  • Imagery: Sight, sound, taste, touch — all senses are used.
  • Mood: Cheerful, excited, carefree.
  • Rhyme scheme: Regular and bouncy, matching the happy mood.
  • Read the poem aloud to feel its rhythm.
  • Connect the poem to your own summer experiences.

Key formulas & results

Everything you need to memorise, in one card. Screenshot this for revision.

Sensory imagery
The poem appeals to sight, sound, taste, and touch
Helps readers picture and feel the scene.
Rhyme
Regular rhyme scheme creates a bouncy, musical rhythm
Matches the cheerful mood.
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Common mistakes & fixes

These are the exact errors that cost students marks in board exams. Read them once, save yourself the trouble.

WATCH OUT
Confusing the flavour of ice cream with the feeling it gives
Flavour is the taste (vanilla, chocolate); feeling is the emotion (happy, refreshed).
WATCH OUT
Missing the sensory details
Look for words that describe how things look, sound, taste, and feel.
WATCH OUT
Writing one-word answers
Write complete sentences with a reason or example from the poem.

NCERT exercises (with solutions)

Every NCERT exercise from this chapter — what it covers and how many questions to expect.

Practice problems

Try each one yourself before tapping "Show solution". Active recall > rereading.

Q1EASY· Recall
Who is the poet of 'Ice Cream Man'?
Show solution
Rachel Field.
Q2EASY· Recall
What season does the poem describe?
Show solution
Summer, a hot summer day.
Q3EASY· Comprehension
How do the children feel when the ice-cream man comes?
Show solution
They feel happy and excited and gather eagerly around his cart for a refreshing treat.
Q4EASY· Devices
Which senses does the poet use to describe the ice-cream man's visit?
Show solution
Sight (the colourful cart and flavours), sound (the cart bell and laughter), taste (sweet, cold ice cream), and touch (the cold treat on a hot day).

5-minute revision

The whole chapter, distilled. Read this the night before the exam.

  • Poet: Rachel Field.
  • Theme: simple joys of summer and childhood.
  • The ice-cream man brings flavours like vanilla, chocolate, and strawberry.
  • Sensory imagery covers sight, sound, taste, and touch.
  • Mood: cheerful, excited, and carefree.
  • The poem has a regular, bouncy rhyme scheme.
  • It celebrates finding happiness in small things.

CBSE marks blueprint

Where the marks come from in this chapter — so you can plan your prep.

Typical chapter weightage: 3-5 marks, depending on the school paper

Question typeMarks eachTypical countWhat it tests
Comprehension / MCQ1-21-2Poet, season, and details
Appreciation2-31Imagery, mood, and rhyme
Prep strategy
  • Read the poem aloud for its rhythm
  • Spot the sensory images
  • Note the cheerful mood and rhyme
  • Connect the poem to your own summer treats

Where this shows up in the real world

This chapter isn't just an exam topic — it lives in the world around you.

Appreciating poetry

The poem shows how sensory words bring a scene to life.

Creative writing

It models using the senses to describe everyday experiences.

Valuing small joys

It reminds us to enjoy simple pleasures in daily life.

Exam strategy

Battle-tested tips from teachers and toppers for this chapter.

  1. Name the poet and season for recall questions
  2. Quote sensory images as evidence
  3. Describe the mood with supporting words
  4. Write full sentences with reasons

Going beyond the textbook

For olympiad aspirants and curious learners — topics that build on this chapter.

  • Write your own four-line poem about a favourite summer treat.
  • Identify examples of alliteration in the poem.

Where else this chapter is tested

CBSE board isn't the only one — other exams test this chapter too.

CBSE Class 5 School ExamHigh
Olympiad / poetry comprehensionMedium

Questions students ask

The real ones — pulled from the Q&A community and tutor sessions.

The poet chooses happy, energetic words and a regular, bouncy rhyme scheme that makes the lines feel like a song when read aloud. She fills the poem with sensory details -- the colourful cart, the cold sweet taste of the ice cream, and the relief it brings on a hot day -- so the reader can almost see, hear, and taste the scene. Together, the rhythm and the joyful images create the carefree, excited mood of a summer treat.

Sensory details appeal to our five senses and make a poem come alive in the reader's imagination. In 'Ice Cream Man', describing how the ice cream looks, the sound of the cart, the cold feel on a hot day, and the sweet taste lets readers experience the moment as if they were there. This is what makes a simple everyday event -- buying ice cream -- feel special and memorable, which is the whole point of the poem.
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Last reviewed on 30 May 2026. Written and reviewed by subject-matter experts — read about our process.
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