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

  • 1Recite the poem with a light, buoyant rhythm matching the kite's movement
  • 2Identify the similes and imagery that create the poem's joyful mood
  • 3Connect the poem to Indian kite-flying traditions (Makar Sankranti, festivals)
  • 4Write a creative response imagining their own fantasy flight
  • 5Contrast this poem's mood with other Poorvi poems (The Raven and the Fox, The Winner)
💡
Why this chapter matters
The Kites is the most purely joyful poem in Poorvi. After the information-dense Hamara Bharat chapter, this short poem provides a moment of imaginative freedom — watching kites 'like coloured birds in the wind-whipped sky' and wishing to ride one 'high, high in the air.' The poem connects to India's deep cultural tradition of kite-flying (Makar Sankranti, Independence Day, the Ahmedabad International Kite Festival) while remaining universally accessible — every child understands the wish to fly. In a unit about Culture and Tradition, this poem reminds us that some traditions are not about ancient crafts but about simple, shared experiences of wonder.

Before you start — revise these

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

The Kites — Class 6 English (Poorvi)

"I wish I were small and light as air, I would climb on a kite and sail up there."

1. About the Poem

This is the second chapter of Unit 5: Culture and Tradition in the Poorvi textbook. A short, buoyant poem that captures the universal childhood fantasy of flying. The speaker watches kites in the sky — "like coloured birds" — and wishes to be small enough to ride one, looking down at the park and rooftops below.

Why This Poem

  • Celebrates a simple, timeless joy: watching kites fly
  • Connects to Indian culture — kite-flying is a beloved tradition, especially during festivals like Makar Sankranti
  • Imaginative and playful — pure childlike wonder
  • Excellent for visualisation and creative writing

2. The Poem (from NCERT Poorvi Textbook)

Up in the air See the kites fly, Like coloured birds In the wind-whipped sky.

I wish I were small And light as air, I would climb on a kite And sail up there.

Then I would drift upon The paper wings, And hear the songs That the wild wind sings.

What fun it would be To look right down, Over the park And the rooftops of town.

The people below Would stand and stare, And wish they were me High, high in the air.


3. The Poem Stanza by Stanza

StanzaWhat the Speaker Sees or Imagines
1Kites flying "like coloured birds" in a windy sky — a real scene
2A wish: to be small enough to ride a kite
3The fantasy deepens: drifting on "paper wings," hearing the wind's songs
4The view from above: park, rooftops — the world made tiny
5The final joyful thought: people below staring up, WISHING they could be the one flying

4. Literary Devices

DeviceExample
Simile"Like coloured birds" — comparing kites to birds
Imagery"Wind-whipped sky," "paper wings," "rooftops of town"
Repetition"High, high in the air" — emphasises the height and joy
RhymeAABB pattern: fly/sky, air/there, upon/sings, down/town, stare/air

5. Kite-Flying in Indian Culture

Kite-flying (patangbaazi) is deeply woven into Indian tradition:

  • Makar Sankranti (January): The most famous kite-flying festival — especially in Gujarat, Rajasthan, and Maharashtra. The sky fills with colourful kites.
  • Independence Day (15 August): Kites in the tricolour — a symbol of freedom.
  • Historical Significance: Kites were used in ancient India for scientific experiments and military signalling.
  • Modern Day: International Kite Festival in Ahmedabad draws kite-flyers from around the world.

6. Important Vocabulary

  • WIND-WHIPPED: blown and tossed by strong wind
  • DRIFT: to move slowly and gently through the air
  • PAPER WINGS: the paper surface of a kite (like the wings of a bird or plane)
  • WILD WIND: strong, untamed wind — personified as "singing"

7. Activities

Activity 1: Recitation

Read the poem aloud. Notice the rhythm — it's light and bouncy, like a kite itself dancing in the wind.

Activity 2: Visualisation and Drawing

Close your eyes and imagine the scene. Then draw what you see: the kites, the park, the rooftops, the people looking up. Colour your kites in the brightest colours you have.

Activity 3: Creative Writing

The poem imagines riding a kite. What would YOU like to ride or fly on? A bird? A cloud? A paper plane? Write a short poem (6-8 lines) about your fantasy flight.

Activity 4: Discussion

Have you ever flown a kite? If yes, describe the experience. If no, would you like to? Why is kite-flying less common today than it used to be?


8. Conclusion

"The Kites" is pure joy distilled into five short stanzas. There's no moral, no lesson, no villain — just a speaker watching kites and wishing to be among them, riding "paper wings" and hearing "the songs that the wild wind sings."

In a unit about Culture and Tradition, this poem reminds us that some traditions are not about grand crafts or ancient arts. Sometimes tradition is simply this: standing in a field on a windy day, holding a string, watching a kite dance against the sky — and wishing, just for a moment, that you could fly too.

⚠️

Common mistakes & fixes

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

WATCH OUT
Reading this as a 'lesson' poem with a moral
Unlike The Raven and the Fox or What a Bird Thought, this poem has no explicit moral or lesson. It's pure joy and imagination. Not every poem needs to teach a lesson — some exist to capture a feeling.
WATCH OUT
Missing the Indian cultural context
Kite-flying is not just a generic childhood activity — it's specifically important in Indian festivals, especially Makar Sankranti. The poem is in Unit 5 (Culture and Tradition) for this reason.

Practice problems

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

Q1EASY· Literary Device
Identify the simile in the first stanza. What does it compare and why?
Show solution
✦ Answer: 'Like coloured birds' — comparing kites to birds. The comparison works because both kites and birds are seen high in the sky, both move gracefully, and colourful kites resemble bright-feathered birds. The simile makes the kites feel alive and natural rather than artificial.

5-minute revision

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

  • Stanza 1: Kites flying 'like coloured birds in the wind-whipped sky' — simile comparing kites to birds.
  • Stanza 2: Speaker wishes to be 'small and light as air' to ride a kite.
  • Stanza 3: Fantasy deepens — 'drift upon the paper wings, and hear the songs that the wild wind sings.' Personification of wind as 'singing.'
  • Stanza 4-5: The view from above — park, rooftops. People below 'would stand and stare, and wish they were me.'
  • Mood: Joyful, imaginative, buoyant. No moral — pure celebration of wonder.
  • Cultural context: Kite-flying at Makar Sankranti, Independence Day, International Kite Festival (Ahmedabad).

CBSE marks blueprint

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

Exam strategy

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

  1. CONTRAST WITH OTHER POEMS: If asked to compare Poorvi poems, this one is unique — it's purely joyful, has no moral, and is about imagination. Contrasting it with The Raven and the Fox (which has a clear moral) or The Winner (which has a philosophical twist) demonstrates comprehensive understanding of the range of poetry in the book.

Questions students ask

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

Kite-flying (patangbaazi) is a significant cultural tradition in India — especially during Makar Sankranti when the skies of Gujarat, Rajasthan, and other states fill with colourful kites. It's also associated with Independence Day (tricolour kites). The International Kite Festival in Ahmedabad draws participants from around the world. The poem belongs in Culture and Tradition because kite-flying IS a living Indian tradition — not an ancient craft like Aipan or Dhokra, but a vibrant, ongoing cultural practice that brings communities together.
Verified by the tuition.in editorial team
Last reviewed on 1 June 2026. Written and reviewed by subject-matter experts — read about our process.
Editorial process →
Header Logo