Somebody's Mother — Class 8 English (Poorvi)
"She's somebody's mother, boys, you know,
For all she's aged and poor and slow."
1. About the Poem
'Somebody's Mother' is a famous English poem written by Mary Dow Brine (American poet, 1832-1925). It is a touching short poem about a young boy helping an elderly stranger cross a slippery winter street, while other boys laugh and pass by.
Why This Poem
- Teaches respect for elders
- Celebrates small acts of kindness
- Reminds us EVERY elder is someone's loved one
- Models how to behave when we see vulnerability
2. The Poem (Summary)
Setting
A cold, snowy day. A busy city street. Many schoolboys passing by, laughing and running.
The Old Woman
An elderly woman, poor and slow, stands trying to cross the icy street. She is afraid of falling. The boys laugh and pass without helping.
The One Kind Boy
One boy stops. He bows politely and offers his arm. He guides the woman safely across the street.
When asked WHY he helped, he replies:
"She's somebody's mother, boys, you know."
The Mother's Prayer
That evening, the old woman prays at home — that 'somebody' (the boy who helped her) be blessed for his kindness to a stranger.
The Lesson
Every elder is someone's parent or grandparent. Treat them as you would want YOUR mother to be treated.
3. Themes
Kindness to Strangers
Helping someone who is not your family but is in need.
Respect for Elders
Indian and global tradition: elders deserve our care.
Empathy
Imagining how others feel; treating them as you'd want your loved ones treated.
Small Acts Matter
The boy did one small thing — but it meant everything to that woman.
Universal Bond of Family
"Somebody's mother" = every elder has loved ones who care.
4. Poetic Devices
- Repetition of "Somebody's mother" for emphasis
- Rhyme scheme (AABB) — pleasing musical quality
- Imagery: visual of icy street, struggling woman
- Direct address: "boys" — speaks to youth
- Dialogue: the boy's words quoted directly
5. Indian Context
Indian Cultural Tradition
- 'Matri Devo Bhava' (Mother is God) — Vedic teaching
- 'Vasudaiva Kutumbakam' (the world is one family)
- Respect for elders deeply embedded in Indian culture
- Joint families traditionally cared for elders
Today's Challenges
- Urbanisation breaks joint families
- Many elderly Indians live alone
- Some neglected by busy children
- Government initiatives like Senior Citizen Helpline
Indian Examples
- Mother Teresa: helped countless elderly poor in Calcutta
- HelpAge India: NGO supporting elderly
- Many elder-care homes opened across cities
6. Worked Examples
Example 1: The poem's message
- Help elderly strangers as you would your own family
- Small kindness has big meaning
- Don't ignore vulnerability around you
Example 2: Why did the woman pray?
- Her prayer was a BLESSING for the boy who helped her
- A mother's prayer is considered sacred
- The boy's kindness was rewarded with prayer (a gift)
Example 3: What can students learn?
- Help elderly cross roads
- Carry their bags
- Listen to their stories
- Visit grandparents regularly
- Don't be impatient with slower people
7. Activities
Activity 1: Reading Aloud
Read the poem with feeling. Discuss the boy's character.
Activity 2: Personal Reflection
Have you ever helped a stranger? Write a paragraph about it.
Activity 3: Family Discussion
Talk to your grandparents about their lives. Listen carefully.
Activity 4: Community Action
Plan a class visit to a senior citizens' home.
8. Vocabulary
- AGED: old
- SLOW: moving with difficulty
- BOW: bend in respect
- SOMEBODY: an unknown but important person
- EMPATHY: feeling another's emotions
- COMPASSION: caring + action
- KINDNESS: warm-hearted action toward others
- RESPECT: regard, esteem
9. Conclusion
'Somebody's Mother' is a short poem with a profound message. In just a few stanzas, it teaches one of life's most important lessons: every elder is someone's loved one — treat them with respect.
The boy in the poem could have laughed and run on like the others. Instead, he stopped, bowed, and helped. His action took only a minute — but the woman's prayer of blessing followed him forever.
In India today, with urbanisation breaking joint families and many elders living alone, this poem is more relevant than ever. We can ALL be the kind boy:
- Help an elderly person cross a road
- Carry heavy bags for grandparents
- Listen to older people's stories
- Visit a senior citizens' home
Be the somebody who helps somebody's mother. Your kindness becomes their prayer.
