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

  • 1Identify the characters and their boasted qualities
  • 2Narrate the pirate attack and the twist
  • 3Explain the ironic ending
  • 4State the central idea (appearances/boasts deceive; real courage is in deeds)
  • 5Identify the poetic devices used
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Why this chapter matters
A fun ballad the RBSE board uses for central-idea, character and extract questions on true courage vs boasting. Its clear story and irony make it a reliable scorer.

The Tale of Custard the Dragon — RBSE Class 10 English (First Flight · Poem)

Everyone in Belinda's house is brave — the little dog, the cat, even Belinda herself — everyone except Custard the dragon, who cries for a "nice safe cage" and is teased as a coward. Then a pirate climbs in the window, and the "brave" ones run and hide, while the cowardly dragon does the one thing no one expected. Ogden Nash's funny ballad proves that loud boasting is not the same as real courage.


1. The characters

Belinda lives in a little white house with four pets, each described by a boastful quality:

  • a little black kitten named Ink,
  • a little grey mouse named Blink,
  • a little yellow dog named Mustard — "as brave as a tiger," and
  • a little pet dragon named Custard.

Belinda herself was "as brave as a barrel full of bears," and Mustard the dog was fierce — but Custard the dragon, despite his fearsome looks (spikes on his back, scales, sharp teeth, a mouth like a fireplace), was a coward: he kept crying for a "nice safe cage." So everyone — Belinda, Ink, Blink and Mustard — laughed at him and called him a coward, a "coward, coward, Custard the dragon."


2. The pirate attack — and the twist

One day, a pirate climbed in through the window — with a pistol in each hand, a cutlass between his teeth, and black beard. Suddenly, all the "brave" ones showed their true colours:

  • Belinda cried for help and hid,
  • Ink and Blink ran away (down to the bottom of the household),
  • even brave Mustard fled with a terrified squeal.

But Custard the dragon — the "coward" — jumped up snorting like an engine, went straight at the pirate with great daring, and gobbled the pirate up (swallowed him whole), saving everyone. The dragon everyone mocked turned out to be the real hero.


3. The ironic ending

You might expect the others to be grateful and humbled. Instead, once the danger passed, Belinda and the pets went right back to boasting — Belinda claimed she was braver than the dragon, Mustard said he was twice as brave, and Ink and Blink also insisted they were braver. And Custard, modest as ever, agreed that he "kept on wishing for a nice safe cage." Everyone returned to teasing him — nothing had really changed. This ironic ending is the poem's final joke.


4. Themes and central idea

  • Appearances are deceptive: the fierce-looking are cowards; the "cowardly" dragon is the bravest.
  • True courage vs empty boasting: those who boast loudest are the first to run; real bravery shows in action, not words.
  • Humour and irony: the comic characters, the exaggeration, and the ending (everyone boasting again) make it a delightful comic ballad.

Central idea: do not judge by appearances or boasts — real courage is proved by deeds. The one dismissed as a coward is the true hero.


5. Poetic devices

  • Ballad: the poem tells a story in verse (a comic ballad).
  • Rhyme scheme: aabb (rhyming couplets) in each stanza, giving a bouncy rhythm.
  • Simile: "brave as a barrel full of bears," "brave as a tiger," "snorting like an engine."
  • Alliteration: e.g. "Custard cried," "brave as a barrel."
  • Imagery / humour: vivid, funny descriptions of the pets and the pirate.
  • Irony: the "coward" is the hero, and the "brave" ones flee.
  • Refrain / repetition: "coward, coward, Custard the dragon."

6. Closing thought

"The Tale of Custard the Dragon" is pure fun with a sly point. The whole household boasts of its bravery and mocks the timid dragon — until real danger arrives, and only the "coward" acts. Nash's comic ballad gently punctures empty boasting: the ones who talk loudest about their courage are the first to hide, while quiet Custard does the brave deed. And the ending — everyone bragging again — reminds us, with a wink, how quickly people forget and how appearances (and boasts) deceive.

For the RBSE board, remember the characters and their boasted qualities, the pirate attack and the twist (the "coward" Custard is the hero), the ironic ending (everyone boasts again), the central idea (appearances/boasts deceive; true courage is in deeds), and the devices (ballad, aabb rhyme, simile, humour, irony). Central-idea and character questions are common.

Key formulas & results

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

Poet
Ogden Nash (a comic ballad)
Tells a funny story in verse.
Characters
Belinda; kitten Ink; mouse Blink; dog Mustard; dragon Custard
All 'brave' except Custard.
The 'coward'
Custard the dragon keeps crying for a 'nice safe cage'
Mocked as a coward despite fierce looks.
The attack
A pirate climbs in; Belinda, Ink, Blink and Mustard flee/hide
The 'brave' ones run.
The twist
Custard fights and gobbles up the pirate — the real hero
Bravery in deeds.
Central idea
Appearances/boasts deceive; true courage is shown by action
Ironic ending: everyone boasts again.
⚠️

Common mistakes & fixes

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

WATCH OUT
Mixing up the pets' names
Ink = black kitten; Blink = grey mouse; Mustard = yellow dog; Custard = the dragon. Keep them straight.
WATCH OUT
Calling Custard a real coward
Custard is called a coward, but he is actually the bravest — he alone faces and eats the pirate. The poem's irony is that the 'coward' is the hero.
WATCH OUT
Missing the ironic ending
After the danger, the others go back to boasting they are braver than Custard — nothing changes. This irony is the poem's final joke.
WATCH OUT
Treating it as a serious poem
It is a COMIC ballad — the humour, exaggeration and irony are central to its effect.
WATCH OUT
Getting the rhyme scheme wrong
The poem uses rhyming couplets (aabb) that give it a bouncy, song-like rhythm.

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· Fact-recall
Name Belinda's four pets.
Show solution
✦ Answer: Ink (kitten), Blink (mouse), Mustard (dog) and Custard (dragon).
Q2EASY· Fact-recall
What did Custard the dragon keep crying for?
Show solution
✦ Answer: a nice safe cage.
Q3EASY· Twist
Who actually defeated the pirate?
Show solution
✦ Answer: Custard the dragon — he gobbled the pirate up.
Q4MEDIUM· Twist
How did the 'brave' characters behave when the pirate attacked?
Show solution
Step 1 — Belinda cried for help and hid, and the pets Ink and Blink ran away. Step 2 — Even the 'brave' dog Mustard fled with a frightened squeal — so all the boasters showed themselves to be cowards. ✦ Answer: they all panicked, ran and hid — the loud boasters proved cowardly.
Q5MEDIUM· Central idea
What is the central idea of 'The Tale of Custard the Dragon'?
Show solution
Step 1 — Those who boast loudest about their bravery flee in real danger, while the mocked 'coward' acts bravely. Step 2 — So appearances and boasts are deceptive; true courage is shown by deeds, not words. ✦ Answer: appearances/boasts deceive — real courage is proved by action, as the 'coward' dragon shows.
Q6MEDIUM· Irony
Why is the ending of the poem ironic?
Show solution
Step 1 — After Custard saves everyone, you would expect gratitude and humility. Step 2 — Instead, Belinda and the pets go right back to boasting that they are braver than the dragon, and everyone teases Custard again — nothing has changed. ✦ Answer: the boasters resume claiming to be braver than the hero dragon — a comic, ironic return to their old ways.
Q7HARD· Character
Contrast the character of Custard with the others.
Show solution
Step 1 — Belinda, Ink, Blink and Mustard constantly boast of their bravery but run and hide when real danger comes. Step 2 — Custard, though fierce-looking, is modest and admits his fear (wanting a safe cage), yet he alone faces the pirate and destroys him. Step 3 — So Custard has genuine, quiet courage, while the others have only loud, empty boasts. ✦ Answer: the boastful pets are really cowards; the humble 'coward' Custard has true courage.
Q8HARD· Extract
How does the poem use humour and irony to make its point?
Show solution
Step 1 — The comic exaggeration (Belinda 'as brave as a barrel full of bears', the fierce dragon crying for a cage) makes the poem funny. Step 2 — The central irony — the mocked coward is the true hero while the boasters flee — delivers the message with a laugh. Step 3 — The final irony (everyone boasting again) shows people rarely learn, adding a last comic twist. Step 4 — Thus humour and irony teach 'don't judge by boasts/appearances' without any preaching. ✦ Answer: comic exaggeration plus the irony of the 'coward' hero and the unrepentant boasters make the point entertainingly.

5-minute revision

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

  • Poet: Ogden Nash; a comic ballad.
  • Belinda's pets: Ink (kitten), Blink (mouse), Mustard (dog), Custard (dragon).
  • All boast of bravery; Custard, though fierce-looking, cries for a 'nice safe cage' and is mocked as a coward.
  • A pirate attacks; Belinda hides and cries, Ink and Blink run, even brave Mustard flees.
  • Custard alone fights and gobbles up the pirate — the true hero.
  • Ironic ending: the others go back to boasting they are braver; everyone teases Custard again.
  • Central idea: appearances and boasts deceive; true courage is shown by deeds.
  • Devices: ballad, aabb rhyme, simile, alliteration, humour, irony, refrain.

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 pets' names, the safe cage, the hero
Short answer21The twist; central idea; the irony
Short/appreciation3–40–1Character contrast; humour and irony
Prep strategy
  • Memorise the characters and their boasted qualities
  • Fix the twist (coward Custard is the hero) and the ironic ending
  • State the central idea (appearances/boasts deceive)
  • Note the devices (ballad, aabb rhyme, simile, humour, irony)

Where this shows up in the real world

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

True courage

It teaches that real bravery is shown in deeds, not boasts.

Not judging by appearances

A memorable lesson against judging people by looks or big talk.

Enjoying poetry

A fun ballad that shows poetry can be humorous and story-like.

Recitation

Its bouncy aabb rhythm makes it great for reading aloud.

Understanding irony

A clear, enjoyable example of irony in literature.

Character study

The contrast between boasters and the quiet hero aids character analysis.

Exam strategy

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

  1. Keep the pets' names and boasted qualities accurate.
  2. State the twist (Custard is the real hero) and the ironic ending.
  3. For central idea, stress appearances/boasts vs true courage.
  4. Name devices (ballad, aabb rhyme, simile, irony, humour).
  5. For character questions, contrast Custard with the boasters.
  6. Bring out the humour in extract answers.

Going beyond the textbook

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

  • The ballad form and its features.
  • Irony and satire in comic verse.
  • Ogden Nash's humorous style and wordplay.
  • Appearance vs reality as a literary 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 character questions common
NTSE / state scholarshipLow — reading comprehension
CBSE/other board EnglishHigh — same prescribed poem
Olympiads (English/IEO)Low–Medium — poetry and irony

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 'The Tale of Custard the Dragon' by Ogden Nash is one of its poems. RBSE (BSER Ajmer) sets the exam pattern and marking.

Because he looks fierce yet keeps crying for a 'nice safe cage', the others mock him as a coward. The poem's irony is that when real danger comes, this 'coward' is the only one brave enough to face and defeat the pirate — showing that boasts and appearances deceive.

All the loud boasters panicked. Belinda cried for help and hid, the kitten Ink and mouse Blink ran away, and even the 'brave' dog Mustard fled in terror — leaving only Custard to fight.

After Custard heroically saves everyone, the others feel no lasting gratitude or humility. They immediately go back to boasting that they are braver than the dragon, and the teasing resumes — a comic, ironic reminder that people rarely change.

That appearances and boasts are deceptive, and true courage is shown by actions, not words. The one dismissed as a coward proves the real hero, while those who bragged loudest run away.
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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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