Let Us Read — The Full Poem
This English Comprehension assessment will be based on: Let Us Read — The Full Poem
Targeting Comprehension & Recall with Intermediate difficulty.
This CBSE English Grammar Assessment will be based on: Let Us Read — The Full Poem
Assessment Format:
• 10 Randomized Grammar Questions (1 mark each)
• Question Types: Fill in the Blanks, MCQs, Error Identification, Reported Speech, Sentence Completion
Total: 10 Questions, 10 Marks
This English Vocabulary assessment will be based on: Let Us Read — The Full Poem
Targeting Vocabulary & Usage with Intermediate difficulty.
The Winner — A Poem About Evening Play
A short, vivid poem by Georgia Heard about children playing ball at dusk — until night itself wins the game. Let us prepare!
- When do you go out to play after school?
- Where do you go to play in the evening?
- Which games do you enjoy most? When do you come back home?
Use these starters: I go to… I play with… I like playing… Sometimes I come back…
1. I go out to play around 5:00 p.m., after finishing homework.
2. I play in the park near my house or in the school ground.
3. I like playing cricket and kho-kho. I come back when it gets dark and my parents call me in.
| Line from Poem | Clue | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| next to the creek | a small body of water | beside a small stream |
| I can't even catch my breath | the child has been running | too breathless to breathe normally |
| When blue dark turns to black | the sky changes colour | when evening becomes night |
| trees creep close | it is getting dark | trees seem to close in as visibility drops in the dark |
Let Us Read — The Full Poem
Understanding the Poem — Stanza by Stanza
Theme Web — Ideas in the Poem
Central Theme: The Joy of Childhood Play
Literary Devices in The Winner
"Night wins!" & "trees creep close"
The poem gives Night the human ability to "win" a game, and gives trees the ability to "creep" (move stealthily). These non-human things are described as if they have the actions and intentions of living beings.
Vivid Sensory Pictures
The poem creates powerful pictures through sight (blue dark turns to black), touch (cold grass aches our feet), and physical sensation (can't catch my breath). We can almost feel the cold grass and the breathlessness!
Shape Poetry — Breathlessness on the Page
The words "I / can't / even / catch / my / breath" are arranged one per line, cascading down. This visual layout mimics the feeling of being out of breath — the reader slows down, like a gasping child.
Example of same technique: "The leaves are falling, / falling, / falling."
No Fixed Rhyme Scheme
Unlike many poems, "The Winner" does not follow a rhyme scheme. It is written in free verse — lines of varying length with no fixed pattern. This gives it a natural, speech-like quality that matches the informal setting of children at play.
Word Power — Vocabulary Engine
Key Words & Expressions from The Winner
Literature CBQ — Extract-Based Questions
CBQ Set 1 — Lines 1–7
I
can't
even
catch
my
breath."
CBQ Set 2 — Final Lines
cold grass aches our feet,
trees creep close—
game's over.
Night wins!"
We chased the ball across the lane,
Till stars crept out to call our name.
The moon said "Quiet!" and we obeyed,
Another evening — another game played.
Personification used: "stars crept out" (stars given the ability to creep like living things) and "The moon said 'Quiet!'" (the moon given the ability to speak and command).
Thinking About the Text
Comprehension Exercises
I. Complete the following based on the poem:
The children play _______ in the _______ in the neighbour's _______. They run so _______ that they run out of breath. They continue to play till the evening when the blue sky turns _______, and the trees are not clearly visible. They can feel their feet _______, now that it is cold. Finally, they stop _______ and go home as it is night.
II. Answer these questions:
Q. Why does "Night wins!" have an exclamation mark? What feeling does it create?
Q. What are some other water bodies you know? (From the poem's 'creek' reference)
Language Workshop — Personification & Visual Poetry
What the Poet Has Done — Language Techniques
Poets sometimes arrange words on the page in a shape or pattern that reinforces the meaning. In "The Winner," the cascading "I can't even catch my breath" visually shows breathlessness.
Another example from your textbook:
falling,
falling.
Each repetition indents further — the visual shape suggests leaves drifting slowly downward.
In "The Winner," two examples of personification stand out:
- "trees creep close" — trees are given the ability to move like a living creature
- "Night wins!" — Night is given the ability to compete and win like a sports player
Exercise: Write your own examples of both techniques
sped
past —
gone!
2. The wind whispered secrets through the tall bamboo.
Let Us Write — Paragraph About Playtime
Write a Paragraph About Your Playtime
Use the clues below to write a paragraph about your evening playtime. Give a title to your paragraph.
• What time do I go out to play?
• Who do I play with?
• What games do we play?
• Which is my favourite game?
• What do we gain from playing together?
• When do we finish playing and go home?
Word Limit: 80–100 words
Every afternoon at five o'clock, I rush downstairs to play with my friends in the building compound. There are six of us, and we take turns choosing the game — sometimes cricket, sometimes kabaddi, and on rainy days, carrom inside. My favourite is cricket because I love the feeling of hitting a good shot. Playing together teaches us to take turns, cheer for each other, and handle both winning and losing with a smile. When the streetlights flicker on, we know our time is up — and we head home, tired, happy, and already looking forward to tomorrow.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is The Winner — Poem about in NCERT English?
The Winner — Poem is a lesson from the NCERT English textbook that covers important literary and language concepts. The lesson includes vocabulary, literary devices, comprehension exercises, and writing tasks aligned to the CBSE curriculum.
What vocabulary is important in The Winner — Poem?
Key vocabulary words from The Winner — Poem are highlighted throughout with contextual meanings, usage examples, and interesting facts. Click any highlighted word to see its full definition and example sentence.
What literary devices are used in The Winner — Poem?
The Winner — Poem uses various literary devices including imagery, symbolism, and figurative language. These are identified with coloured tags throughout the text for easy recognition and understanding by students.
What exercises are included for The Winner — Poem?
Exercises include extract-based comprehension questions in CBSE board exam format, grammar workshops connected to the passage, vocabulary activities, and creative writing tasks with model answers provided.
How does The Winner — Poem help in board exam preparation?
The Winner — Poem includes CBSE-format extract-based questions, long answer practice with model responses, and grammar exercises that mirror board exam patterns. All questions follow Bloom's Taxonomy levels L1-L6.