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

  • 1Summarise what the child notices about the shadow
  • 2Explain how the poet uses personification
  • 3Recognise the AABB rhyme and imagery
  • 4Explain why shadows change size and disappear
  • 5Appreciate childhood curiosity and wonder
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Why this chapter matters
'My Shadow' by R.L. Stevenson captures a child's playful wonder at their shadow. It builds poetry comprehension and an understanding of personification, rhyme, and the natural curiosity of childhood, while connecting to the science of shadows.

Before you start — revise these

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

My Shadow — Class 5 English (CBSE)

From the current Class 5 English Marigold textbook. Read the poem to enjoy a child's playful curiosity about their shadow, then attempt the practice questions.


1. About the poet

Robert Louis Stevenson (1850-1894) was a Scottish author and poet. He wrote many famous novels like 'Treasure Island' and poems for children collected in 'A Child's Garden of Verses'. His poems are loved for their simple language, musical rhythm, and ability to see the world through a child's eyes.

2. The poem (summary)

In 'My Shadow', a child observes their shadow with curiosity and wonder. The shadow follows the child everywhere — it goes in and out, it grows tall and small, it jumps and runs. Sometimes the shadow is very tall, sometimes very short. The child wonders where the shadow goes when there is no light and why the shadow sometimes disappears. The poem captures the innocent questions a child might ask about this mysterious companion that is always there.

The central theme is the joy of observation and the natural curiosity of childhood. The poet does not explain the science of shadows — he simply presents the child's perspective with wonder and delight.

3. Theme and values

ThemeExplanation
CuriosityThe child is curious about why the shadow behaves the way it does.
ObservationThe child carefully watches the shadow's movements.
WonderThe poem celebrates the magic of everyday things.
PlayfulnessThe shadow is like a playful friend who jumps and runs.
ImaginationThe child imagines the shadow as a living being.

Values to learn

  • Stay curious about the world around you.
  • Observe nature and natural phenomena carefully.
  • Ask questions and try to find answers.
  • Find joy in simple, everyday things.

4. Poetic devices

Rhyme scheme

The poem uses a regular AABB rhyming couplet pattern. This creates a bouncy, sing-song rhythm that matches the playful mood of the poem.

Personification

The poet gives human qualities to the shadow. The shadow 'jumps', 'runs', and 'follows' the child as if it were a living friend. This makes the poem more engaging for young readers.

Imagery

The poet creates clear images:

  • The shadow growing very tall.
  • The shadow becoming very small or disappearing.
  • The shadow following the child everywhere.

Hyperbole (exaggeration)

The child exaggerates the shadow's behaviour — for example, the shadow is described as being 'taller than me' in a certain light.

5. Key vocabulary

WordMeaning
ShadowA dark area or shape made when light is blocked
FollowTo go after or behind someone
LeapTo jump high or far
ShootsMoves quickly or grows suddenly
NippersSmall children (informal, old-fashioned word)
ProperCorrect, right, or real
ObserveTo watch carefully
CuriousWanting to know or learn something
DisappearTo go away or become invisible
CompanionA friend or someone you spend time with

6. Reading comprehension

Questions to think about while reading

  1. What does the child notice about the shadow?
  2. Where does the shadow go when it disappears?
  3. How does the child feel about the shadow?
  4. Why does the shadow change size?
  5. What does the shadow do when the child jumps?

Understanding the child's perspective

The child does not understand the science of light and shadows. Instead, the child treats the shadow as a friend or playmate. This innocence is what makes the poem charming.

Science connection

Shadows are made when light is blocked by an object. The shadow changes size and shape because of the angle of the light source. The shadow disappears in darkness because there is no light to be blocked.

7. Writing practice

Prompt 1: Describe your own shadow. When is it tall? When is it short? When does it disappear?

Prompt 2: Imagine your shadow is a character. Write a short story about a day you spent with your shadow.

Prompt 3: Write four lines of a poem about something else in nature that interests you — like the moon, rain, or a bird.

8. Common mistakes

  • Mistake: Thinking the shadow is a real person or living thing in the poem Fix: The shadow is not alive. The poet uses personification — treating the shadow as if it were alive.
  • Mistake: Confusing 'shadow' with 'shade' Fix: A shadow is the dark shape of an object. Shade is a cool area away from direct sunlight.
  • Mistake: Writing that the shadow disappears because it 'goes away' Fix: The shadow disappears when there is no light. Without light, there is no shadow.

9. Self-test

  1. Who wrote the poem 'My Shadow'?
  2. How does the child describe the shadow's behaviour?
  3. What happens to the shadow when the child jumps?
  4. Why does the shadow sometimes disappear?
  5. Name one poetic device used in the poem.

10. Answer key

  1. Who wrote the poem 'My Shadow'? Answer: Robert Louis Stevenson.

  2. How does the child describe the shadow's behaviour? Answer: The child describes the shadow as following them everywhere, jumping when they jump, growing tall and short, and sometimes disappearing.

  3. What happens to the shadow when the child jumps? Answer: The shadow also jumps, as if it is copying the child's movements.

  4. Why does the shadow sometimes disappear? Answer: The shadow disappears when there is no light (in darkness). Shadows need light to be visible.

  5. Name one poetic device used in the poem. Answer: Personification (the shadow is described as if it were a living person) or rhyme (AABB couplets).

11. Quick revision

  • Poet: R.L. Stevenson (Scottish, wrote 'Treasure Island' and 'A Child's Garden of Verses').
  • Central theme: Childhood curiosity and wonder at everyday things.
  • Poetic devices: Personification, imagery, rhyme, hyperbole.
  • The shadow follows, jumps, grows, shrinks, and disappears.
  • Shadow science: Shadows need light. They change size with light angle.
  • Read the poem aloud to enjoy its musical rhythm.
  • Observe your own shadow at different times of the day.

Key formulas & results

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

Personification
The shadow follows, jumps, grows, and shrinks like a friend
Human qualities given to the shadow.
Shadow science
A shadow forms when light is blocked; no light means no shadow
Its size changes with the angle of light.
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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
Thinking the shadow is a real living thing
The shadow is not alive; the poet uses personification to treat it as if it were.
WATCH OUT
Confusing shadow with shade
A shadow is the dark shape of an object; shade is a cool area out of direct sunlight.
WATCH OUT
Saying the shadow disappears because it goes away
The shadow disappears because there is no light to be blocked.

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 wrote the poem 'My Shadow'?
Show solution
Robert Louis Stevenson.
Q2EASY· Comprehension
How does the child describe the shadow's behaviour?
Show solution
The shadow follows the child everywhere, jumps when they jump, grows tall and short, and sometimes disappears.
Q3EASY· Reasoning
Why does the shadow sometimes disappear?
Show solution
Because shadows need light; in darkness there is no light to be blocked, so the shadow vanishes.
Q4EASY· Devices
Name one poetic device used in the poem.
Show solution
Personification (the shadow is treated like a living friend), or rhyme (AABB couplets).

5-minute revision

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

  • Poet: Robert Louis Stevenson.
  • Theme: a child's curiosity and wonder at everyday things.
  • Personification gives the shadow human actions.
  • The poem uses AABB rhyming couplets and clear imagery.
  • The shadow grows tall, shrinks, jumps, and disappears.
  • Shadows need light; they change size with the light's angle.
  • The poem celebrates childhood imagination.

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 and the shadow's behaviour
Appreciation2-31Personification, rhyme, and shadow science
Prep strategy
  • Read the poem aloud for its rhythm
  • Spot examples of personification
  • Understand why shadows change and vanish
  • Observe your own shadow at different times

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 personification brings everyday things to life.

Science link

It connects to learning how light and shadows work.

Curiosity

It encourages observing and wondering about the world.

Exam strategy

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

  1. Name the poet for recall questions
  2. Give examples of personification
  3. Explain shadow behaviour with light
  4. Mention the AABB rhyme scheme

Going beyond the textbook

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

  • Observe and record how your shadow changes through the day.
  • Write a short poem personifying something in nature.

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.

Personification means giving human qualities to something that is not alive. In this poem the child describes the shadow as if it were a real friend: it 'follows' the child everywhere, 'jumps' when the child jumps, and grows tall or small as though it has a mind of its own. By treating the shadow as a playful companion, the poet captures how a young child sees the world with imagination and wonder, making the poem charming and easy to enjoy.

A shadow forms when an object blocks light, and its size depends on the angle of the light source. When the light is low, such as in the early morning or evening, the shadow stretches out long; when the light is high overhead at noon, the shadow becomes short. If there is no light at all, like in the dark, nothing is blocked, so no shadow forms and it seems to disappear. The child in the poem does not explain this science but simply wonders at it.
Verified by the tuition.in editorial team
Last reviewed on 30 May 2026. Written and reviewed by subject-matter experts — read about our process.
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