The Elephant's Child

About the Story

'The Elephant's Child' is one of Rudyard Kipling's 'Just So Stories' (1902) — stories that IMAGINE how different animals got their UNIQUE features.

'Kipling called them 'JUST SO' stories because his daughter would ask for the stories to be told 'JUST SO' — exactly the same way every time. They are FANTASY explanations of how animals got their special traits.'

Key Details

AspectDetail
AuthorRudyard Kipling (1865-1936)
From'Just So Stories' (1902)
TypePourquoi tale (an imaginary story explaining WHY something is the way it is)
SettingAfrica (the 'great grey-green, greasy Limpopo River')
Main charactersThe Elephant's Child, Kolokolo Bird, Crocodile, Bi-Coloured-Python-Rock-Snake
ThemesCuriosity, questions, consequences, growing up

Main Characters

CharacterDescriptionRole
The Elephant's ChildA young elephant with a SHORT nose (before it became a trunk). FULL of questions.ASKS too many questions
Kolokolo BirdA bird who gives ADVICESends the child to the Limpopo
CrocodileLives in the Limpopo River. WANTS to eat the elephant.PULLS the nose into a trunk
Bi-Coloured-Python-Rock-SnakeA wise ROCK SNAKEHELPS the child escape the crocodile
Family membersThe child's FATHER, MOTHER, AUNT, and UNCLESSPANK the child for asking questions

Summary

The Curious Elephant

'The Elephant's Child was FILLED with 'satiable curtiosity!' That means he had an UNCONTROLLABLE desire to ask questions about EVERYTHING.'

He asks questions to everyone he meets:

QuestionWho He Asks
'What does the CROCODILE have for dinner?'His FATHER — gets spanked
'What makes the STINGING Nettle sting?'His AUNT — gets spanked
'Where does the SUN go at night?'His UNCLES — gets spanked
'What is the COLOUR of the sky?'His MOTHER — gets spanked
'What does the CROCODILE have for dinner?'KOLOKOLO BIRD — gets an answer

The Journey to the Limpopo

The Kolokolo Bird tells the Elephant's Child to go to the 'great grey-green, greasy Limpopo River' to find the answer. The child travels for DAYS.

'He packed his bags — well, he did not HAVE bags, so he packed BANANAS and SUGARCANE and MELONS into his little short nose. Off he went, TRAMPING through Africa.'

Meeting the Crocodile

At the Limpopo River, the Elephant's Child meets the CROCODILE. The crocodile says, 'I am the Crocodile,' and offers to WHISPER the answer in the Elephant's Child's ear.

'Come CLOSER, little one,' said the Crocodile. The elephant's child bent down. The CROCODILE SNAPPED! He GRABBED the child by his little short nose and began to PULL!'

The Trunk Is Born

The crocodile PULLS the nose while the Bi-Coloured-Python-Rock-Snake helps the child PULL BACK. They PULL and PULL until the nose stretches into a LONG TRUNK.

'They pulled and pulled and pulled — and the child's nose stretched and stretched and stretched. It grew LONGER and LONGER — until it was a full TRUNK!'

The Useful Trunk

At first, the child is SAD about his long nose. But then he DISCOVERS that the trunk is INCREDIBLY useful.

Use of the TrunkHow It Helps
PICK up thingsCan grab food without bending
SLAP fliesThe long nose can reach anywhere
BLOW dustCleans itself
DRINK waterSucks water and sprays it into the mouth
CARRY loadsCan carry heavy things
SHOW affectionWrap around loved ones

Style and Language

FeatureExample
Repetition'satiable curtiosity' — repeated many times
Onomatopoeia'SCHLOOP!' — the sound of the crocodile pulling
Alliteration'great grey-green, greasy Limpopo River'
HumourThe child gets SPANKED for asking questions
ExaggerationThe trunk stretches for PAGES of pulling
Invented words'Bi-Coloured-Python-Rock-Snake' — no ordinary snake!

Themes

ThemeHow It Appears
CuriosityAsking questions LEADS to discovery
ConsequencesCuriosity has RISKS — but also REWARDS
Growing upThe child learns and BECOMES more capable
TransformationThe nose becomes a TRUNK — a wonderful new tool

Key Quotes

' "The Elephant's Child was full of 'SATIABLE CURTIOSITY!" '

' "Go to the banks of the great grey-green, greasy Limpopo River." '

' "This is TOO bad for you!" — the Crocodile, speaking with the child's nose in his mouth'

' "I am going to be SPANKED for this — but at least I LEARNED something!" '

Key Facts to Remember

  • 'The Elephant's Child' is a 'JUST SO STORY' by Rudyard Kipling.
  • It explains HOW the elephant got its LONG TRUNK.
  • The story is set at the LIMPOPO River in Africa.
  • The child was FULL of 'SATIABLE CURTIOSITY' — endless curiosity.
  • The crocodile PULLS the child's nose until it becomes a trunk.
  • The trunk turns out to be VERY useful.

Common Mistakes

MistakeCorrect Understanding
Thinking the story is SCIENTIFICThe story is FANTASY — it IMAGINES how elephants got trunks
Forgetting the Bi-Coloured-Python-Rock-SnakeThe SNAKE is the one who helps the child PULL BACK from the crocodile
Missing the lesson about curiosityThe story SHOWS that curiosity leads to DISCOVERY — not just punishment

Exam Focus (ICSE Class 5)

TopicMarks (Typical)Question Type
Summary of the story4-5 marksExplain how the elephant got its trunk
Character of the Elephant's Child3-4 marksDescribe the child's personality
The role of the Crocodile3 marksWhat did the crocodile do?
Uses of the trunk3-4 marksList ways the trunk is useful
Theme — curiosity3 marksIs curiosity good or bad in the story?

Self-Test: 5 Questions

Q1. Why did the Elephant's Child go to the Limpopo River?

Q2. How did the Elephant's Child get his trunk?

Q3. List four ways the trunk is useful to the elephant.

Q4. What does 'satiable curtiosity' mean?

Q5. What is a 'Just So Story'?

Answers

A1. The Kolokolo Bird told him to go to the Limpopo River to find out what the Crocodile has for dinner.

A2. The Crocodile GRABBED the Elephant's Child by his short nose and PULLED. The Bi-Coloured-Python-Rock-Snake helped the child pull back. The pulling STRETCHED the nose into a long trunk.

A3. (1) Picking up food. (2) Slapping flies. (3) Drinking and spraying water. (4) Carrying heavy loads. (5) Showing affection to loved ones.

A4. It means INSATIABLE CURIOSITY — an endless desire to ask questions and learn new things. The child wanted to know EVERYTHING.

A5. A 'Just So Story' is an IMAGINARY story that explains how an animal got a special feature. Kipling wrote them for his daughter, who wanted the stories told 'just so' every time.

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