The Tiger in the Tunnel — Ruskin Bond

About the Author

Ruskin Bond (born 1934) is a celebrated Indian author of British descent, known for his stories set in the HIMALAYAN foothills. He received the Padma Shri (1999) and the Padma Bhushan (2014). His stories often explore the relationship between HUMANS and NATURE — especially the WILD animals of India. 'The Tiger in the Tunnel' is one of his most TENSE and DRAMATIC stories.

Characters

CharacterRoleKey Trait
BaldeoProtagonist, forest guardBrave, dutiful, responsible
TembuBaldeo's young sonLoyal, learning to be brave
The Man-eaterAntagonist, Bengal tigerDangerous, cunning, predatory
MotherBaldeo's wifeConcerned, family-oriented

Summary

Part 1: The Forest Guard

Baldeo works as a KHALASI (forest guard) at a small railway STATION deep in the Indian jungle. His job is to CHECK the railway tunnel for OBSTRUCTIONS — fallen trees, rocks, animals. He carries a small AXE, his only weapon. His young son TEMBU sometimes accompanies him.

Part 2: The Man-Eater

A MAN-EATING TIGER roams the forests near the tunnel. The villagers and railway workers are TERRIFIED. The tiger has already KILLED several people. It is old but CUNNING. It knows the tunnel is a good place to AMBUSH prey.

Part 3: The Night Watch

One night, Baldeo goes to check the tunnel. Tembu is with him briefly but stays behind. Baldeo walks through the DARK tunnel carrying his AXE. Inside the tunnel, he SENSES something. He stops. He RAISES his axe. The TIGER is there.

Part 4: The Fight

The tiger CHARGES. Baldeo SWINGS his axe. The axe strikes the tiger's SHOULDER. The tiger ROARS in pain. It attacks again. Baldeo fights BRAVELY but is KILLED. The tiger is also WOUNDED. It limps away — and is later KILLED by a TRAIN on the railway tracks.

Part 5: The Aftermath

Tembu WAITS for his father. Baldeo does not return. In the morning, the villagers find Baldeo's body. Tembu is HEARTBROKEN but also PROUD. His father died fighting a tiger — doing his DUTY. The tunnel is safe again.

Themes

Courage and Duty

Baldeo knows the tiger is DANGEROUS. He goes to the tunnel anyway. It is his DUTY. He does not RUN. He FACES the threat. This is TRUE courage — not the ABSENCE of fear, but ACTION despite fear.

Sacrifice

Baldeo SACRIFICES his life doing his job. He dies so that others (passengers on the train) might be safe. His sacrifice is NOBLE.

Father and Son

The relationship between Baldeo and Tembu is CENTRAL. Tembu looks up to his father. Baldeo is a ROLE MODEL. After Baldeo's death, Tembu carries forward his father's courage.

Man vs Nature

The conflict between Baldeo and the tiger represents the STRUGGLE between humans and the Natural world. Bond does not make the tiger 'evil' — it is a WILD animal doing what wild animals do. Baldeo is not 'hunting' — he is doing his JOB.

Literary Devices for ICSE

DeviceExampleEffect
SuspenseThe slow approach through the dark tunnelBuilds tension; readers fear what is coming
Imagery'Dark tunnel,' 'gleaming eyes,' 'roar of the tiger'Vivid visual and auditory details
SymbolismThe tunnel = the unknown, danger, fateThe tunnel represents DEATH waiting in darkness
ForeshadowingWarnings about the man-eater earlierHints at the coming danger
ContrastThe peaceful jungle vs the violent attackContrast between normal life and sudden danger
Third-person narratorObserver perspectiveAllows us to see both Baldeo's and the tiger's actions
Simple languageShort, direct sentencesMirrors the URGENCY of the moment

Common Mistakes in ICSE Exams

  1. Saying Baldeo was 'foolish' to go alone — he was DOING HIS JOB. He had no choice. ICSE examiners expect you to appreciate his DUTY.
  2. Calling the tiger 'evil' — Bond does not present the tiger as evil. It is a WILD animal acting on instinct. Use 'dangerous' or 'predatory,' not 'evil.'
  3. Forgetting about Tembu — the father-son relationship is an important theme. Don't ignore it.
  4. Missing the connection to THE TUNNEL — the tunnel is symbolic. It is dark, confined, dangerous. Baldeo faces his death INSIDE it.
  5. Saying Baldeo 'failed' because he died — he did NOT fail. He fought BRAVELY and his death meant the tiger was weakened and later killed.

ICSE Exam Focus

2-mark questions

  • What is Baldeo's job?
  • What weapon does Baldeo carry?
  • What happens to the tiger at the end?

4-mark questions

  • How does Bond create SUSPENSE in the tunnel scene?
  • What does Baldeo's COURAGE reveal about his character?
  • Why is the RELATIONSHIP between Baldeo and Tembu important?

6-mark (essay) questions

  • 'Baldeo is a TRUE HERO.' Discuss with evidence from the story.
  • Analyse how Bond uses the SETTING (the tunnel, the jungle) to create atmosphere and tension.

Self-Test

  1. Why does Baldeo go to the tunnel KNOWING there is a man-eating tiger nearby? Answer: Because it is his DUTY as the khalasi (forest guard). He must check the tunnel for obstructions BEFORE the train passes. He is RESPONSIBLE for the safety of the passengers.

  2. How does Bond create SUSPENSE in the story? Answer: Through the dark setting, the SLOW approach to the tunnel, the warnings about the man-eating tiger earlier in the story, and the DETAILED description of every small sound and movement.

  3. Why is the TUNNEL an important SYMBOL in the story? Answer: The tunnel is dark, confined, and uncertain — it represents the UNKNOWN. It is where Baldeo faces his DEATH. It also represents the DANGER that must be faced for others to be safe.

  4. What is the relationship between Baldeo and Tembu? How does it affect the story? Answer: They have a CLOSE father-son bond. Tembu ADMIRES his father and wants to be like him. After Baldeo's death, Tembu must learn to be BRAVE himself.

  5. Is the tiger presented as a VILLAIN? Explain. Answer: Not exactly. The tiger is a WILD ANIMAL acting on survival instinct. It is old and has learned to hunt humans because they are easier prey. Bond presents it with RESPECT for its power, not as a caricature of evil.

  6. What is the SIGNIFICANCE of the tiger being killed by a TRAIN? Answer: The train represents MODERNITY and human progress. The tiger is killed not by a human hero but by the symbol of technology — suggesting that the conflict between nature and civilisation will inevitably be won by machines, not men. It adds a layer of tragic IRONY — both the tiger and Baldeo are, in different ways, victims of forces larger than themselves.

Literary Analysis

Bond uses the technique of FORESHADOWING throughout the story. The title itself — "The Tiger in the Tunnel" — creates tension before we read a single word. The darkness of the tunnel, the isolation of the jungle at night, and Baldeo's instinctive fear all build toward the climactic confrontation. 'Ruskin Bond is a master of atmosphere. He doesn't need to describe the tiger in great detail — the reader's imagination, primed by the setting, does the work. This is the power of SUGGESTION over explicit description.'

Values and Discussion

The story raises profound questions: What is true courage? Is Baldeo more heroic than a person who faces danger once, dramatically? Or is his daily, uncelebrated bravery more admirable? 'Discuss in class: Is Baldeo a hero? Some will say yes — he saves the train and dies protecting travellers. Others may argue that his courage is of a different, quieter kind — the courage to do a difficult, dangerous job every night for his family, without recognition or applause.'

ICSE Exam Context

'For Class 7 ICSE literature exams, expect 2-mark reference-to-context questions (identifying the speaker, explaining a phrase) and a 4-mark character sketch or theme question. Practice writing a character sketch of Baldeo in 100-120 words. Use specific incidents from the story, not general praise. Quote short phrases like "his hand was steady" or "he would not turn back."' Answer: It is IRONIC. Baldeo fought the tiger and died. But the TRAIN — the very thing Baldeo was protecting — kills the tiger. This suggests a kind of poetic justice.

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