The Little Match Girl — Hans Christian Andersen
About the Author
Hans Christian Andersen (1805–1875) was a Danish author whose fairy tales are among the MOST TRANSLATED works in literary history. 'The Little Match Girl' (1845) is one of his MOST FAMOUS stories. 'Born into EXTREME poverty himself, Andersen knew first-hand the CRUELTY of a society that ignores its poorest members. ICSE examiners emphasise this AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL dimension — Andersen is writing from EXPERIENCE, not just imagination.'
Plot Summary
| Section | Events |
|---|---|
| Setting | NEW YEAR'S EVE — freezing cold. A poor little girl walks BAREFOOT through the streets selling matches |
| Failure | No one BUYS. No one GIVES her anything. She is TERRIFIED to go home because her father will BEAT her for failing to sell any matches |
| The First Match | She lights a match to WARM herself. She sees a VISION of a WARM STOVE. The match goes out. The vision DISAPPEARS |
| The Second Match | She lights another. She sees a TABLE with a ROAST GOOSE — and it JUMPS off the table with a knife in its back! The match goes out |
| The Third Match | She sees a CHRISTMAS TREE with thousands of candles. The candles rise and BECOME STARS — one falls. 'Someone is dying,' says the girl (her grandmother told her a falling star means a soul going to God) |
| The Fourth Match | She sees her GRANDMOTHER — the ONLY person who ever loved her. She lights the ENTIRE bundle of matches to keep the vision from FADING |
| The End | The grandmother takes the girl to HEAVEN. The next morning, the girl is found FROZEN to death. 'She had tried to warm herself,' people say — not KNOWING what she had SEEN |
The Four Visions — Symbolic Analysis
Vision 1 — The Warm Stove
| Aspect | Meaning |
|---|---|
| What she sees | A large IRON STOVE with polished brass feet |
| What it SYMBOLISES | WARMTH, comfort, HOME — everything she LACKS |
| Why it goes out | Reality INTERRUPTS the dream |
| ICSE Focus | The CONTRAST between the VISION of warmth and the FREEZING reality |
Vision 2 — The Feast
| Aspect | Meaning |
|---|---|
| What she sees | A table with a WHITE cloth, china, and a ROAST GOOSE |
| What it SYMBOLISES | FOOD, ABUNDANCE, celebration — everything she LACKS |
| Why it goes out | The match STUBNS out — the vision VANISHES |
| ICSE Focus | The goose 'JUMPS off the table' — the ABSURDITY of abundance on a night of scarcity |
Vision 3 — The Christmas Tree
| Aspect | Meaning |
|---|---|
| What she sees | A HUGE Christmas tree with thousands of candles |
| What it SYMBOLISES | JOY, family, celebration — the NORMAL life she cannot have |
| The falling star | Her grandmother's death — and her OWN approaching death |
| ICSE Focus | The tree candles 'rose higher and higher' — they become STARS, linking EARTH to HEAVEN |
Vision 4 — The Grandmother
| Aspect | Meaning |
|---|---|
| What she sees | Her DEAD grandmother — the only person who loved her |
| What it SYMBOLISES | LOVE, acceptance, SAFETY — the ONLY escape from her suffering |
| Why she lights ALL matches | She DESPERATELY wants to keep her grandmother with her |
| ICSE Focus | 'She is taken to God' — the grandmother is a CHRIST-figure, leading the child to salvation |
Key Themes for ICSE
| Theme | Evidence |
|---|---|
| Poverty and INDIFFERENCE | No one buys, no one helps — society IGNORES the poor |
| Innocence and SUFFERING | The girl is PURE but SUFFERS — why do the innocent suffer? |
| Imagination as ESCAPE | The matches CREATE a world where she is loved and warm |
| Death as RELEASE | Death is NOT tragic — it is a RELEASE from suffering into HEAVEN |
| The CRUELTY of the World | New Year's Eve = celebration for the rich, DEATH for the poor |
| Light vs DARKNESS | Each match = a FLASH of hope in the DARKNESS of her life |
Christian Symbolism
'The story is DEEPLY Christian in its imagery and message.'
| Symbol | Meaning |
|---|---|
| The matches | LIGHT in the darkness — like the LIGHT of faith |
| The grandmother | A CHRIST figure — leading the faithful to salvation |
| The falling star | A SOUL ascending to GOD |
| New Year's Eve | DEATH and REBIRTH — the old year dies, the new is born |
| The frozen body | The EARTHLY shell — the SOUL has escaped |
ICSE Exam Focus — Key Quotes
- 'In the cold and the darkness — a poor little girl, bareheaded and barefoot' — SETTING the scene
- 'No one had bought anything from her the whole day' — SOCIETY'S indifference
- 'She dared not go home, for she had sold no matches' — FEAR of her father
- 'The stove! How it BLAZED!' — Vision 1 — the desire for WARMTH
- 'Grandmother!' — the CRY for love
- 'She was dead — of cold — on the last evening of the old year' — the TRAGIC conclusion
Common Mistakes in ICSE Answers
| Mistake | Correction |
|---|---|
| Calling it a 'happy' story | It is TRAGIC — the girl DIES. The 'happy' part is her AFTERLIFE |
| Missing the FOURTH vision | The grandmother is the MOST IMPORTANT — she leads the girl to heaven |
| Ignoring the CHRISTIAN symbolism | The story is DELIBERATELY religious — the grandmother represents salvation |
| Treating the father as a MONSTER | He is also POOR and desperate — the story critiques POVERTY, not individuals |
| Forgetting the SOCIAL critique | Andersen is CRITICISING a society that LETS children freeze to death |
ICSE Exam Focus — Marks Blueprint
| Question Type | Marks | Frequency |
|---|---|---|
| Describe the FOUR visions | 6-8 | Always |
| Theme of POVERTY and INDIFFERENCE | 8-10 | Very High |
| Role of the GRANDMOTHER | 4-6 | High |
| Significance of the MATCHES | 4-6 | Very High |
| Is the ending HAPPY or SAD? | 6-8 | High |
Self-Test
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The visions: Describe the FOUR visions the little match girl sees. What does EACH represent?
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Theme: 'The story is a SOCIAL CRITIQUE disguised as a fairy tale.' Discuss.
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Symbolism: What do the MATCHES symbolise? Why does the girl light them ONE BY ONE?
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The ending: The girl is found DEAD. Is this a TRAGIC ending or a HOPEFUL one? Argue both sides.
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Character: The girl's FATHER is mentioned briefly. What does his presence (and absence) tell us about the family's situation?
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Setting: How does the NEW YEAR'S EVE setting contribute to the story's THEME?
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Critical: The people who find her body say, 'She was trying to warm herself.' What is IRONIC about this statement?
Answers to Self-Test (Key Points)
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(1) WARM STOVE — need for warmth. (2) FEAST with roast goose — need for FOOD. (3) CHRISTMAS TREE — need for JOY. (4) GRANDMOTHER — need for LOVE. Each vision represents something FUNDAMENTAL that she LACKS in life.
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The story CRITICISES a society that CELEBRATES (New Year's Eve) while children FREEZE in the streets. No ONE helps her. The wealthy are INDIFERENT. Andersen uses the FAIRY TALE form to DELIVER a POLITICAL message.
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The matches symbolise HOPE and ESCAPE. Each match is a MOMENTARY escape from the brutal reality. She lights them one by one because they are her ONLY comfort — and she RATIONS them carefully.
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TRAGIC: A child died ALONE and UNLOVED in the freezing cold. No one HELPED her. HOPEFUL: She is now in HEAVEN with her grandmother — free from suffering, poverty, and fear. Death is RELEASE.
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The father is also POOR — he will beat her because their survival depends on her sales. He is NOT evil — he is a VICTIM of the same system. The story SYMPATHISES with the poor family while CRITICISING the wealthy society.
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New Year's Eve is a time of CELEBRATION and family. The CONTRAST between the WARM homes with feasts and the COLD street where a child freezes is the story's CENTRAL irony. The CELEBRATION of the rich causes the DEATH of the poor.
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The IRONY: she WAS trying to warm herself — but the matches were ALSO her ESCAPE into vision. The people see ONLY her physical death — they do not see the BEAUTIFUL visions she experienced. They see TRAGEDY; she experienced TRANSCENDENCE.
