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

  • 1Explain the dialogue between the speaker and Anne Gregory
  • 2Explain the symbolism of the 'yellow hair'
  • 3State the central idea (inner self vs outward beauty; only God loves unconditionally)
  • 4Identify the poetic devices used
  • 5Answer symbolism and appreciation questions
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Why this chapter matters
A thoughtful dialogue poem the RBSE board uses for central-idea and symbolism questions on inner vs outer beauty. Its clear 'only God' conclusion is a frequent focus.

For Anne Gregory — RBSE Class 10 English (First Flight · Poem)

A beautiful young woman wishes to be loved for who she is, not for her lovely golden hair. But can any human really see past outward beauty? W.B. Yeats turns this into a short, wise conversation and gives a humbling answer: only God can love us for ourselves alone.


1. The poem in brief — a conversation

The poem is a dialogue between the speaker (an older, wiser voice — the poet) and Anne Gregory, a lovely young woman with beautiful "honey-coloured / … yellow hair."

  • The speaker tells Anne that young men, in despair, are drawn to her beautiful yellow hair — they love her for her looks, not her true self.
  • Anne replies that she can change her hair colour — dye it "brown, or black, or carrot" — so that young men will be forced to love her for herself alone and not for her yellow hair.
  • The speaker answers that he heard an old religious man declare he had found a "text" (in scripture) proving that only God could love her "for herself alone / And not her yellow hair."

2. Central idea

The poem explores the difference between outer (physical) beauty and inner (true) self, and asks whether anyone can love a person for their inner self alone. Its conclusion is that human love is almost always attracted by outward appearance; to love someone purely for their inner self, ignoring beauty, is possible only for God. True, selfless, unconditional love is divine, beyond ordinary human capacity.


3. Symbolism and the argument

  • The "yellow hair" symbolises external/physical beauty — the surface that attracts admirers.
  • Anne's wish to dye it shows her desire to be valued for her real self, not her looks.
  • The old religious man's "text" (an appeal to scripture/God) delivers the poem's verdict: only the divine can love unconditionally.

So the poem gently teaches that we should ideally value the inner person, but honestly admits how strongly humans are swayed by appearance.


4. Poetic devices

  • Dialogue / conversational form: the poem is a spoken exchange between two voices.
  • Symbolism: yellow hair = physical beauty.
  • Allusion: to religion/scripture ("an old religious man… found a text").
  • Repetition: "for herself alone / and not her yellow hair" — the poem's refrain and key idea.
  • Rhyme: a regular rhyme scheme across its three stanzas.
  • Imagery: "great honey-coloured / Ramparts at your ear" — her hair described vividly.

5. Closing thought

"For Anne Gregory" is a small poem about a large truth. Anne's youthful wish — to be loved for herself, not her beauty — is idealistic and admirable, but Yeats gently corrects it: humans are drawn to appearance, and to love someone purely for their inner self is something only God can do. The poem does not mock Anne; it simply reveals, with warmth and a touch of sadness, how rare truly unconditional love is in the human world — and how we might still aspire to it.

For the RBSE board, remember the dialogue between the speaker and Anne, the symbolism of the "yellow hair" (physical beauty), Anne's wish to dye her hair to be loved for herself, and the conclusion (only God can love us for ourselves alone). Central-idea and symbolism questions are common.

Key formulas & results

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

Poet
W.B. Yeats (a dialogue poem)
Irish poet.
Form
A conversation between the speaker (poet) and young Anne Gregory
Three stanzas.
Yellow hair
Symbol of physical/outer beauty that attracts admirers
'great honey-coloured ramparts'.
Anne's wish
To dye her hair (brown/black/carrot) so men love her for herself
Value the inner self.
The verdict
Only God can love her 'for herself alone / and not her yellow hair'
From an old religious man's 'text'.
Central idea
Humans love outward beauty; only God loves the inner self unconditionally
True selfless love is divine.
⚠️

Common mistakes & fixes

These are the exact errors that cost students marks in board exams. Read them once, save yourself the trouble.

WATCH OUT
Reading 'yellow hair' literally only
The yellow hair SYMBOLISES physical/outer beauty. The poem is about inner self vs appearance, not really about hair colour.
WATCH OUT
Saying humans can easily love the inner self
The poem's point is the opposite — humans are drawn to appearance; loving someone for their inner self ALONE is something only God can do.
WATCH OUT
Missing who delivers the conclusion
The final idea comes from 'an old religious man' who found a scriptural 'text' — an allusion to religion/God.
WATCH OUT
Thinking the poet mocks Anne
He does not mock her idealistic wish; he gently reveals how rare truly unconditional (divine) love is.
WATCH OUT
Ignoring the dialogue form
The poem is a conversation between two voices — note this for form/structure questions.

NCERT exercises (with solutions)

Every NCERT exercise from this chapter — what it covers and how many questions to expect.

Practice problems

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

Q1EASY· Symbol
What does Anne Gregory's 'yellow hair' symbolise?
Show solution
✦ Answer: her physical or outward beauty.
Q2EASY· Fact-recall
What does Anne say she can do so that men love her for herself?
Show solution
✦ Answer: she can dye her hair a different colour — brown, black or carrot.
Q3EASY· Conclusion
According to the poem, who alone can love Anne for herself alone?
Show solution
✦ Answer: only God.
Q4MEDIUM· Dialogue
Why does the young man love Anne, according to the speaker?
Show solution
Step 1 — The speaker says young men are drawn to Anne because of her beautiful 'yellow hair' — her outward beauty. Step 2 — They love her appearance, not her true inner self. ✦ Answer: for her beautiful yellow hair (her physical beauty), not for herself.
Q5MEDIUM· Central idea
What is the central idea of 'For Anne Gregory'?
Show solution
Step 1 — Human beings are naturally attracted to outward beauty and tend to love people for their appearance. Step 2 — To love someone purely for their inner self, ignoring their beauty, is possible only for God — such unconditional love is divine. ✦ Answer: humans love outer beauty; only God can love a person for their true inner self alone.
Q6MEDIUM· Anne's wish
Why does Anne want to change her hair colour?
Show solution
Step 1 — She is troubled that men love her only for her beautiful yellow hair (her looks). Step 2 — By dyeing it a plainer colour, she hopes men will be forced to love her for herself — her inner qualities — rather than her beauty. ✦ Answer: so that men would love her for her true self, not for her beautiful hair.
Q7HARD· Appreciation
How does the poem contrast human love with divine love?
Show solution
Step 1 — Human love, the poem says, is drawn to outward beauty (Anne's yellow hair) — people rarely see past appearance. Step 2 — Even if Anne changed her hair, humans would still be swayed by looks. Step 3 — Only God, according to the old religious man's text, can love a person 'for herself alone' — truly unconditionally. ✦ Answer: human love is attracted by appearance, while only God's love is selfless and for the inner self alone.
Q8HARD· Extract
'only God, my dear, / Could love you for yourself alone / And not your yellow hair.' Explain these lines.
Show solution
Step 1 — The speaker reports the conclusion of an old religious man who found this truth in a scriptural text. Step 2 — It means that ordinary human beings are drawn to outward beauty (the 'yellow hair'), so they cannot love a person purely for their inner self. Step 3 — Only God is capable of such unconditional love — loving someone 'for herself alone', regardless of appearance. ✦ Answer: only divine love is truly selfless and for the inner self; human love is swayed by outward beauty.

5-minute revision

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

  • Poet: W.B. Yeats; a three-stanza dialogue poem.
  • The speaker tells Anne that young men love her for her beautiful 'yellow hair'.
  • 'Yellow hair' symbolises outward/physical beauty.
  • Anne wishes to dye her hair (brown/black/carrot) so men love her for herself.
  • An old religious man's 'text' (scripture) gives the verdict.
  • Conclusion: only God can love her 'for herself alone / and not her yellow hair'.
  • Central idea: humans love outer beauty; unconditional love of the inner self is divine.
  • Devices: dialogue, symbolism, allusion, repetition/refrain, imagery.

Rajasthan (RBSE) marks blueprint

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

Typical chapter weightage: 3–5 marks

Question typeMarks eachTypical countWhat it tests
MCQ / extract-based11–2The symbol, Anne's wish, the conclusion
Short answer21Why men love Anne; central idea; her wish
Short/appreciation3–40–1Human vs divine love; extract explanation
Prep strategy
  • Fix the symbolism: yellow hair = physical beauty
  • Learn the dialogue and Anne's wish to dye her hair
  • State the conclusion (only God loves for the self alone)
  • Note the devices (dialogue, symbolism, allusion, refrain)

Where this shows up in the real world

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

Inner vs outer beauty

A prompt for valuing character over appearance in real relationships.

Understanding love

It distinguishes conditional (appearance-based) from unconditional love.

Self-worth

It encourages being valued for who we are, not just how we look.

Poetry appreciation

A model of the dialogue form and symbolism in verse.

Discussion and debate

The inner-vs-outer-beauty question is great for classroom discussion.

Values education

It supports reflection on judging people fairly.

Exam strategy

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

  1. Always interpret 'yellow hair' as a symbol of physical beauty.
  2. Explain the dialogue and Anne's idealistic wish.
  3. State the conclusion (only God loves for the self alone) for central-idea questions.
  4. Note the allusion to religion/scripture.
  5. For extract questions, contrast human and divine love.
  6. Mention the dialogue form for structure questions.

Going beyond the textbook

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

  • The dialogue/dramatic form in lyric poetry.
  • Symbolism and allusion in Yeats's poetry.
  • Philosophical ideas of love — eros vs agape.
  • Appearance vs essence as a literary and philosophical theme.

Where else this chapter is tested

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

RBSE Class 10 Board (BSER Ajmer)High — central-idea and symbolism questions common
NTSE / state scholarshipLow — reading comprehension
CBSE/other board EnglishHigh — same prescribed poem
Olympiads (English/IEO)Low–Medium — poetry appreciation

Questions students ask

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

Yes. RBSE prescribes the NCERT reader 'First Flight' for Class 10 English, and 'For Anne Gregory' by W.B. Yeats is one of its poems. RBSE (BSER Ajmer) sets the exam pattern and marking.

It symbolises Anne's outward, physical beauty — the surface quality that attracts admirers. The poem uses it to contrast external beauty with a person's true inner self.

Because she is unhappy that men love her only for her beautiful yellow hair. She believes that if she dyes it a plainer colour, men will be forced to love her for her true, inner self rather than her looks.

That human beings are naturally attracted to outward beauty and tend to love people for their appearance. To love someone purely for their inner self, ignoring beauty, is possible only for God — such unconditional love is divine.

According to the poem — quoting an old religious man's scriptural text — only God can love a person 'for herself alone and not her yellow hair'. Ordinary human love is swayed by outward appearance.
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Last reviewed on 2 July 2026. Written and reviewed by subject-matter experts — read about our process.
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