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

  • 1Identify the central theme, speaker, and emotional tone of each poem; explain how the theme is developed through specific images and stanzas
  • 2Identify and explain literary devices (simile, metaphor, personification, extended metaphor, alliteration, contrast, repetition) with exact quotations
  • 3Respond to ICSE passage-based questions: identify speaker and context, explain meaning, identify figures of speech, comment on tone
  • 4Summarise key prose stories (The Little Match Girl, All Summer in a Day, My Greatest Olympic Prize, The Blue Bead) and identify their central themes
  • 5Write short analytical essays connecting a poem's imagery or theme to its broader social or philosophical context
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Why this chapter matters
ICSE Class 10 poetry and prose tests close reading, figure of speech identification, and thematic analysis. The four core poems — Daffodils (Wordsworth), I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings (Angelou), The Patriot (Browning), and Sea-Fever (Masefield) — cover nature/memory, freedom and oppression, political betrayal, and the romantic sea. Students who memorise key quotations and understand the central metaphor of each poem score consistently high.

Before you start — revise these

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

Poems & Prose — ICSE Class 10

Part 1 — Daffodils (William Wordsworth)

Key Points for ICSE Exam

  • Theme: Nature as HEALER. The 'inward eye' — memory as treasure.
  • Structure: 4 stanzas of 6 lines each (quatrain + couplet). Rhyme: ABABCC.
  • Figures of Speech: Simile ('lonely as a cloud'). Personification (daffodils 'dancing,' 'tossing their heads'). Hyperbole ('ten thousand saw I at a glance'). Alliteration ('Beside the lake, beneath the trees').
  • The 'Inward Eye': The poet did not REALISE at the time what 'wealth' the daffodils had given him. Later, in solitude, the memory 'flashes' upon him — and his heart fills with joy. 'The poem is about the AFTERLIFE of a beautiful experience in MEMORY.'

Part 2 — I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings (Maya Angelou)

About the Poet

Maya Angelou (1928–2014) was an African-American poet, memoirist, and civil rights activist. This poem is from her autobiography of the same name. It is a METAPHOR for the African-American experience — the CAGED BIRD represents the OPPRESSED (enslaved, segregated, silenced), longing for FREEDOM.

The Two Birds — The Contrast

The FREE BirdThe CAGED Bird
'Leaps on the back of the wind''Stalks down his narrow cage'
'Dips his wing in the orange sun's rays''Can seldom see through his bars of rage'
'Dares to claim the sky''His wings are clipped and his feet are tied'
SINGS of freedomSINGS of freedom
The song of JOYThe song of PAIN and LONGING

Key Analysis

  • The FREE bird represents PRIVILEGE — those who have never known oppression.
  • The CAGED bird represents the OPPRESSED — those whose freedom has been taken.
  • BOTH BIRDS SING. But the free bird's song is about POSSESSION ('names the sky his own'). The caged bird's song is about LONGING — 'a fearful trill of things unknown but longed for still.'
  • The Final Stanza: 'The caged bird sings of FREEDOM.' The poem is a TESTIMONY to the RESILIENCE of the oppressed — they cannot be silenced. The SONG is the bird's DEFIANCE.

Figures of Speech

  • Extended Metaphor: The caged bird = the oppressed (African-Americans. Any oppressed people.)
  • Contrast (Juxtaposition): Free bird vs. Caged bird
  • Repetition: 'Caged bird.' 'Freedom.' Emphasises the central theme.
  • Alliteration: 'Seldom see through.' 'Shadow shouts.'
  • Personification: The bird 'stalks.' It has human emotions.

Part 3 — The Patriot (Robert Browning)

The Poem — An Old Story Retold

A man is being led to his EXECUTION. A year ago, the SAME CROWD that now HATES him had WORSHIPPED him. They threw ROSES in his path. Now they throw STONES.

Stanza-by-Stanza

Stanza 1 — The Glory (One Year Ago) : 'It was roses, roses, all the way.' The crowd adored him. They strewed his path with flowers. The church spires were 'flamed with flags.' 'The air broke into a mist of bells.'

Stanza 2 — The Fall (Today) : 'Alack, it was I who leaped at the sun.' His AMBITION was his DOWNFALL. The same crowd now HATES him. He walks to the scaffold — 'my forehead bleeding from the stones they threw.'

Stanza 3 — Reflections on the Crowd : 'Thus I entered, and thus I go!' The crowd is FICKLE. They worshipped WITHOUT REASON. They condemn WITHOUT REASON.

Stanza 4 — The Scaffold : He is at the place of execution. 'There's nobody on the house-tops now.' The crowd has GONE HOME. He is ALONE — facing death.

Stanza 5 — The House of God : He sees a 'SAFE' place — the House of God. He TRUSTS that God will be MORE JUST than the crowd. ''Tis God shall repay: I am safer so.'

Key Themes

  • The Fickleness of the Crowd: Public opinion is UNSTABLE. Adoration can turn to HATRED in a moment.
  • The Fall of the Hero: The poem is a DRAMATIC MONOLOGUE — like a Shakespearean tragedy compressed into 6 stanzas.
  • Divine Justice vs. Human Justice: The patriot puts his faith in GOD — the only judge who cannot be corrupted by crowds.

Figures of Speech

  • Dramatic Monologue: One speaker. The reader INFERS the situation.
  • Contrast: Roses (then) vs. Stones (now). Glory vs. Shame. The crowd's worship vs. the crowd's bloodlust.
  • Alliteration: 'Roses, roses.' 'Palsied the public.' 'Striving to stem.'
  • Repetition: 'It was roses, roses, all the way.' Emphasises the PAST glory.

Part 4 — Key Prose Stories (Overview)

The Little Match Girl (Hans Christian Andersen)

A POOR little girl tries to sell matches on a FREEZING New Year's Eve. No one buys. She lights the matches to warm herself — and in each flame, she sees a VISION (a warm stove, a feast, a Christmas tree, her dead grandmother). She FREEZES TO DEATH — but 'no one imagined what beautiful things she had seen.' Key themes: POVERTY. Innocence. The COLDNESS of society. The power of IMAGINATION.

All Summer in a Day (Ray Bradbury)

On VENUS, where it rains CONSTANTLY, the sun comes out for ONLY ONE HOUR every seven years. A classroom of children waits. One girl, MARGOT (who remembers the sun from Earth), is LOCKED IN A CLOSET by jealous classmates. They see the sun. She MISSES it. Key themes: BULLYING. The cruelty of jealousy. The preciousness of what we TAKE FOR GRANTED.

Other Commonly Studied Stories

  • The Blue Bead (Norah Burke): A girl in an Indian jungle. A crocodile. A moment of courage.
  • My Greatest Olympic Prize (Jesse Owens): The true story of Owens and Luz Long at the 1936 Berlin Olympics. Friendship transcending Nazi ideology.

Key formulas & results

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

Daffodils — Central Theme and 'Inward Eye'
'For oft, when on my couch I lie / In vacant or in pensive mood, / They flash upon that inward eye / Which is the bliss of solitude.' (Wordsworth)
The 'inward eye' = memory as treasure. The poem argues that the VALUE of a beautiful experience is RETROSPECTIVE — realised later in quiet moments, not at the time of seeing.
Daffodils — Key Figures of Speech
Simile: 'I wandered lonely as a cloud.' Personification: 'Daffodils / Tossing their heads in sprightly dance.' Hyperbole: 'Ten thousand saw I at a glance.' Alliteration: 'Beside the lake, beneath the trees.'
For ICSE: always name device + quote + explain effect. Personification gives daffodils human joy; hyperbole conveys the overwhelming abundance of beauty.
Caged Bird — The Central Extended Metaphor
FREE BIRD: 'Leaps on the back of the wind' / 'Dares to claim the sky.' CAGED BIRD: 'Stalks down his narrow cage' / 'His wings are clipped and his feet are tied' / 'Sings of freedom — a fearful trill of things unknown / but longed for still.'
The caged bird = the oppressed (African-Americans in Angelou's context; universally, any oppressed group). BOTH birds sing — free bird sings of possession; caged bird sings of LONGING. The caged bird's song is DEFIANCE, not just sadness.
The Patriot — Dramatic Monologue Structure
'It was roses, roses, all the way.' (One year ago — adoration.) 'My forehead bleeding from the stones they threw.' (Today — condemnation.) 'Thus I entered, and thus I go!' 'Tis God shall repay: I am safer so.'
The central irony: the patriot is condemned for the same acts that once made him a hero. Browning asks: can public opinion constitute justice? Answer: only divine judgment is reliable.
The Patriot — Key Figures of Speech
Dramatic monologue (one speaker, implied listener). Contrast: roses (then) vs stones (now). Alliteration: 'roses, roses.' Repetition: 'It was roses, roses, all the way.' PERSONIFICATION: 'The air broke into a mist of bells.'
Dramatic monologue is the key form to identify. The reader infers the situation from the speaker's own words — never directly told by the narrator.
Little Match Girl — Theme and Technique
Poor girl freezing on New Year's Eve. Lights matches → visions (warm stove, feast, grandmother). Freezes to death. 'No one imagined what beautiful things she had seen.'
Theme: POVERTY and society's indifference to the poor. Power of imagination as the only consolation of the destitute. The final line is the story's moral indictment — no one noticed her death or her beauty.
All Summer in a Day — Theme and Irony
Venus: constant rain; sun appears for ONE HOUR every 7 years. Margot (who remembers the sun from Earth) is locked in a closet by jealous classmates. She MISSES the sun. The children let her out only after the sun is gone.
Theme: BULLYING. The cruelty of jealousy. The irreversibility of lost opportunity. The children's guilt at the end — and the irony that they finally understand what they did — is the story's moral.
My Greatest Olympic Prize — Theme
Jesse Owens (African-American) at 1936 Berlin Olympics. Luz Long (German athlete) helps Owens fix his approach on the long jump, ensuring Owens qualifies. Owens wins gold. They walk arm in arm before Hitler.
Theme: FRIENDSHIP TRANSCENDING RACIAL AND NATIONAL BARRIERS. The true Olympic ideal. Hitler's ideology defeated by a German's act of sportsmanship toward a Black athlete.
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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
Saying Wordsworth felt happy when he saw the daffodils
'I gazed — and gazed — but little thought / What wealth the show to me had brought.' He did NOT immediately recognise the value. The poem's point is retrospective value — realised later, in 'vacant or in pensive mood.'
WATCH OUT
Describing the caged bird's song as only 'sad'
The song is 'a fearful trill of things unknown / but longed for still.' It is not simply sad — it is DEFIANCE. The bird cannot fly but it CAN sing. Angelou's point: the spirit of the oppressed cannot be silenced.
WATCH OUT
Identifying only one theme in The Patriot
The Patriot has three themes: (1) fickleness of crowds, (2) the patriot's own ambition contributing to his fall ('I leaped at the sun'), (3) divine vs human justice ('Tis God shall repay'). Mention all three for full marks.

Practice problems

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

Q1EASY· poem-daffodils
Explain the meaning of 'the inward eye / Which is the bliss of solitude' in Daffodils.
Show solution
The 'inward eye' refers to the MIND'S EYE — the power of memory to recreate a scene not physically present. Wordsworth argues that solitude (lying on his couch in a 'vacant or pensive mood') is not empty — it is the occasion when stored memories of beautiful experiences 'flash' into consciousness. The 'bliss' is the joy that comes from being alone and allowing memory to surface. Key idea: the true VALUE of a beautiful experience in nature is realised only LATER, in memory — not at the moment of experiencing it. ✦ Answer: The 'inward eye' = memory/imagination. Solitude allows stored beauty to resurface and fill the heart with joy — the experience's value is retrospective.
Q2EASY· poem-patriot-safer
Why does the Patriot say 'I am safer so' in the final stanza?
Show solution
The Patriot is walking to his execution. Human crowds condemned him without justice — the same crowd that once threw roses now throws stones. He takes consolation in DIVINE JUSTICE: 'Tis God shall repay: I am safer so.' God — unlike human crowds — cannot be swayed by popularity or mob sentiment. In God's court, his actions will be judged on their merit, not on the crowd's fickle opinion. 'Safer' means: safer from injustice, safer from arbitrary human judgment. ✦ Answer: He trusts God's judgment over human crowds. God will be a fairer judge — that is the 'safety' of divine justice over popular opinion.
Q3EASY· figure-of-speech-method
How do you answer a 'figure of speech' question in an ICSE poetry exam? Use an example from Daffodils.
Show solution
A complete figure of speech answer has THREE parts: (1) NAME the device: 'This is an example of PERSONIFICATION.' (2) QUOTE it exactly: 'In the phrase daffodils tossing their heads in sprightly dance, the daffodils are given human characteristics.' (3) EXPLAIN its EFFECT: 'This personification makes the daffodils seem alive and joyful, suggesting that nature is not passive but actively expressive. It mirrors the poet's own hidden joy that he will only realise later.' ✦ Answer: Name device → Quote exactly → Explain its effect on meaning/emotion. Missing any part costs marks.
Q4MEDIUM· poem-caged-bird-contrast
How does Maya Angelou use contrast in 'I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings' to communicate her central theme?
Show solution
Angelou structures the entire poem as a sustained CONTRAST between two birds — one free, one caged — to represent the contrast between freedom and oppression. The FREE BIRD 'leaps on the back of the wind' and 'dips his wing in the orange sun's rays' — images of boundless physical movement. He 'dares to claim the sky.' His world is UNLIMITED. The CAGED BIRD, by contrast, 'stalks down his narrow cage' and 'can seldom see through his bars of rage.' His wings are 'clipped,' his feet 'tied.' His world is CONFINED. The deepest irony of the contrast: the caged bird's song is MORE POWERFUL than the free bird's. The free bird sings of what he has; the caged bird sings of what he yearns for — 'things unknown / but longed for still.' Longing is more compelling than contentment. Through this contrast, Angelou communicates: oppression cannot silence the human spirit. ✦ Answer: Free bird (unlimited) vs caged bird (confined). The caged bird's song of yearning is ultimately more powerful — defiance despite captivity.
Q5MEDIUM· poem-patriot-dramatic-monologue
What is a dramatic monologue? How does Browning use the technique in 'The Patriot'?
Show solution
A DRAMATIC MONOLOGUE is a poem spoken by a single character to an implied audience, in a specific moment of crisis, through which the speaker's character and situation are revealed WITHOUT authorial commentary. In 'The Patriot,' Browning gives us a man walking to execution. Three things are revealed through the monologue: (1) His SELF-AWARENESS: 'Alack, it was I who leaped at the sun' — he acknowledges his own ambition may have contributed to his fall. (2) His JUDGMENT OF THE CROWD: 'Thus I entered, and thus I go!' — fidelity based on popularity is worthless. (3) His CONSOLATION: 'Tis God shall repay: I am safer so.' Divine justice over human crowd. Browning's genius: the reader feels the full arc of a political life — triumph, betrayal, execution — in one voice, one walk to the scaffold. ✦ Answer: Dramatic monologue = one speaker revealing character through their own words. Browning reveals self-awareness, judgment of crowds, and faith in divine justice through the patriot's walk to the scaffold.
Q6HARD· poem-dover-beach-compare
Compare the central theme of 'Daffodils' (Wordsworth) and 'I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings' (Angelou). What do they share and how do they differ?
Show solution
BOTH poems explore how the human spirit responds to confinement or difficulty — but from opposite directions. WORDSWORTH in 'Daffodils' explores the HEALING POWER OF MEMORY. He was wandering 'lonely as a cloud' (aimless, perhaps melancholic) when the daffodils caught his attention. He did not immediately understand their value. Later, when he is on his couch in a 'vacant or pensive mood,' the memory 'flashes upon that inward eye' and his heart 'dances with the daffodils.' Nature provides a reservoir of joy that can be drawn on in moments of loneliness — the spirit is replenished by remembered beauty. ANGELOU in 'Caged Bird' explores the DEFIANCE OF THE OPPRESSED SPIRIT. The caged bird cannot escape physical confinement — its wings are clipped, its feet tied. But it SINGS. The song is not joy (as in Daffodils) but a 'fearful trill of things unknown / but longed for still' — a cry of desire for freedom. The caged bird's spirit cannot be silenced by physical imprisonment. SIMILARITY: Both poems assert that the human (or animal) spirit finds expression even in the absence of ideal conditions. DIFFERENCE: Wordsworth's emotion is RETROSPECTIVE JOY — consolation found in memory. Angelou's is PRESENT DEFIANCE — assertion of spirit despite ongoing oppression. One looks backward (memory) for comfort; the other reaches forward (longing) for freedom. ✦ Answer: Both affirm the resilience of the human spirit. Daffodils = memory as healing retrospective joy. Caged Bird = present defiance — singing from within captivity.

5-minute revision

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

  • Daffodils: 'inward eye' = memory as the poem's real subject. Value of experience is RETROSPECTIVE.
  • Daffodils figures: simile ('lonely as a cloud'), personification ('daffodils dancing'), hyperbole ('ten thousand').
  • Caged Bird: free bird vs caged bird = privilege vs oppression. BOTH sing — caged bird's song = defiance.
  • Caged Bird: extended metaphor throughout. Contrast/juxtaposition is the poem's structural backbone.
  • The Patriot: dramatic monologue. Roses (then) → stones (now). Fickleness of crowds.
  • The Patriot: 'I am safer so' — faith in divine justice as consolation for human injustice.
  • Little Match Girl: poverty + social indifference + power of imagination. 'No one imagined...'
  • All Summer in a Day: Margot locked in closet, misses the sun. Bullying, jealousy, irreversibility.
  • My Greatest Olympic Prize: Owens + Luz Long, 1936 Berlin. Friendship over racial/national barriers.
  • For ALL poem questions: name device + exact quote + explain its EFFECT on meaning/emotion.

ICSE marks blueprint

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

Where this shows up in the real world

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

Mass Incarceration Discourse

Angelou's 'Caged Bird' metaphor is cited in contemporary discussions of prison systems, refugee detention, and any context where human freedom is physically constrained.

Nature Therapy Research

Wordsworth's 'inward eye' and the healing power of nature memory is cited in environmental psychology research as early literary evidence for nature's mental health benefits.

Political Polling — Rally and Crash

The Patriot's theme of fickle public opinion is cited in political science to describe the 'rally and crash' phenomenon in popularity polling.

Legal Drafting and Journalism

Close reading of poetry — attention to specific words, images, and their effects — develops precision in language that transfers directly to legal drafting and journalism.

Exam strategy

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

  1. Read each extract TWICE before writing. Answer in the order questions are asked.
  2. For 'figure of speech' questions: always give NAME + EXACT QUOTE + EFFECT in 2 sentences. Missing the effect costs marks.
  3. For theme questions: state the theme explicitly in your first sentence, then quote to support it, then explain. Never just describe what happens.
  4. For prose: answer questions based on the story's theme and technique, not plot summary.
  5. Allocate 12–15 minutes per 10-mark poem question. For 5-mark prose: 8 minutes.

Going beyond the textbook

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

  • Compare the political exile theme in 'The Patriot' with Caesar's assassination in Julius Caesar — both explore how popular adoration transforms into murderous rage.
  • Angelou's 'Caged Bird' can be read alongside Mandela's 'Long Walk to Freedom' — both use physical confinement as a metaphor for systemic oppression.
  • Wordsworth's 'spots of time' (Prelude) extends the 'inward eye' concept — research how Romantic poets theorised memory as the source of poetic creation.
  • Research the 1936 Berlin Olympics in detail — Owens winning four gold medals under Hitler's gaze is one of the most powerful moments in sporting history.

Where else this chapter is tested

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

ICSE Class 10 English Literature Board ExamCore — poetry questions are guaranteed in every paper
ISC Class 12 English — Reverie poemsSame poem analysis skills: Dover Beach, Gift of India, Birches, Crossing the Bar
Cambridge IGCSE English LiteratureSimilar passage-based poetry analysis format

Questions students ask

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

Three parts: (1) NAME the device — 'This is an example of PERSONIFICATION.' (2) QUOTE it exactly. (3) EXPLAIN its EFFECT — what does this device ADD to the poem's meaning or emotional impact? A device identified without explanation earns half marks at most.

SIMILE: uses 'like' or 'as' — 'I wandered lonely AS A CLOUD.' METAPHOR: direct comparison without like/as — 'The air broke into a MIST of bells.' EXTENDED METAPHOR: sustained throughout the poem — in Caged Bird, the caged bird IS the oppressed person throughout all stanzas.

PLOT = what happens (events). THEME = what the story MEANS (the deeper idea). In All Summer in a Day: PLOT = Margot is locked in a closet and misses the sun. THEME = the cruelty of jealousy, the irreversibility of lost opportunity. ICSE asks for THEME, not plot summary.

The caged bird sings of 'things unknown' — freedom it has never experienced. 'Fearful' carries both FEAR (the unknown is frightening) and AWE (the longing for something enormous and unknown). It is not simply sad; it is a cry from the depths of a captive spirit reaching for something it cannot name but knows it needs.

It is a PERSONAL ESSAY written by Jesse Owens himself — a memoir of his 1936 Berlin Olympics experience. Unlike fiction, it presents actual events as Owens experienced them. The 'prize' of the title is not the gold medal but Luz Long's FRIENDSHIP — a German athlete helping a Black American in Nazi Germany. The text's power comes from its being a true story.
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Last reviewed on 28 May 2026. Written and reviewed by subject-matter experts — read about our process.
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