The Poem — A Friend’s Prayer
This English Comprehension assessment will be based on: The Poem — A Friend’s Prayer
Targeting Comprehension & Recall with Intermediate difficulty.
This CBSE English Grammar Assessment will be based on: The Poem — A Friend’s Prayer
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: The Poem — A Friend’s Prayer
Targeting Vocabulary & Usage with Intermediate difficulty.
Before You Read
Bloom: L2 Understand- Read these three sentences carefully:
- “I wish my friend brings idli in her tiffin tomorrow.”
- “I hope my friend and I win the race.”
- “May my friend get well soon.”
- If you could say a special prayer for your best friend, what would you ask for? Think of something truly selfless? — something that would make their life better.
The Poem — A Friend’s Prayer
Stanza-by-Stanza Explanation
The speaker begins by expressing a sincere wish that friendships remain the highest priority in their life. They acknowledge feeling deeply fortunate to have wonderful companions. The word “blessed” conveys a sense of spiritual gratitude — as if having good friends is a gift from above. In return for this gift, the speaker pledges to offer the very best of themselves to these friendships.
Here the speaker resolves to do more than simply listen to or share in their friends’ dreams and plans. Merely agreeing and nodding is not enough. The speaker promises to take active steps — to put in real effort — to help make those dreams a reality. This stanza highlights the difference between a passive friend (who only listens) and an active one (who works alongside you).
The final stanza carries the poem’s most powerful idea. The speaker asks for the ability to understand others through feelings and empathy (“use my heart to see”), not through outward appearance or distant assumptions. They resolve never to form opinions about people without truly knowing them. The closing line — loving friends exactly as they are — is a message of unconditional acceptance, the deepest form of friendship.
Vocabulary from the Poem
Theme Web — A Friend’s Prayer
Bloom: L4 AnalyseFigure: Thematic web — click on any sub-theme to see supporting evidence from the poem
Literary Devices in the Poem
Every pair of consecutive lines rhymes (be/me, blessed/best, share/care, do/true, see/be, afar/are). This gives the poem a smooth, song-like quality that makes it feel like a gentle chant or a repeated promise.
The word “friends” and “my” appear again and again throughout the poem. This constant repetition reinforces the speaker’s deep emotional connection to their companions and keeps friendship at the centre of every thought.
The heart cannot literally see anything — this is a metaphor for understanding people through feelings and empathy rather than through outward appearances. It suggests that true vision comes from compassion, not just the eyes.
The word “blessed” creates a warm, spiritual image of being showered with good fortune. Meanwhile, “judgements from afar” paints a picture of standing at a distance and forming opinions without coming close enough to truly know someone.
Extract-Based Questions — Set 1
Bloom: L2–L5Extract-Based Questions — Set 2
Bloom: L3–L6Exercises
1. Summary Completion — Circle the Correct Word
Bloom: L1 RememberThis poem is a prayer / speech for the poet’s friends. She feels that friends are the most important part of her life / school days. She considers herself lucky and feels that her special / brave friends are a blessing. She wants to do more than just listen to / clap for her friends’ hopes and plans. She prays / imagines that she can use her heart / mind to understand her friends and love them as they are / when happy. She wishes to help make their dreams come true / correct.
2. Answer in One Word
Bloom: L1 Remember3. Comprehension Questions
4. Synonyms — Words with Similar Meanings
Bloom: L2 UnderstandTwo words that carry a meaning similar to “blessed” in the context of this poem:
5. Qualities of a Good Friend
Bloom: L2 UnderstandA good friend has many fine qualities. Here are some important ones:
Fill in the blanks with the most suitable quality from the box above:
- Priya always tells the truth, even when it is difficult. She is .
- Rohan stood by his friend when everyone else left. He is .
- Meera always shares her notes and helps classmates who are confused. She is .
- Aman speaks gently and never says hurtful words. He is .
- Neha always remembers her friend’s birthdays and asks how they are feeling. She is .
6. Write Three Sentences about Three Friends
Bloom: L3 ApplyThink of three friends. Write one sentence about each, describing what makes them special. Use describing words (adjectives) from the box above.
My friend Ananya is kind because she always shares her snacks with everyone during the break.
Your turn:
- My friend is because .
- My friend is because .
- My friend is because .
7. Listening Activity — Outdoor Activities with Friends
Bloom: L2 UnderstandYour teacher will read out a short passage about outdoor activities that friends enjoy together. Listen carefully and answer the following questions:
- Name two outdoor activities mentioned in the passage.
- Why are outdoor games better when played with friends?
- Which activity would you like to do with your friends? Why?
1. Possible answers include: playing in the park, cycling, flying kites, playing hide-and-seek, going for a nature walk, or skipping rope — depending on the passage read by the teacher.
2. Outdoor games are more enjoyable with friends because you can form teams, share the excitement of winning and losing, and create happy memories together. Friends encourage each other and make any activity feel like an adventure.
3. (Open-ended) I would like to go cycling with my friends because it is healthy exercise, and we can explore new parts of our neighbourhood together.
8. Speaking Activity — Friend Conversations
Bloom: L3 ApplyWork with a partner. Choose one of these situations and role-play a short conversation (6–8 dialogues):
You and your friend are walking in a park after school. Talk about what you see (trees, birds, flowers), what games you could play, and why you enjoy spending time together.
It is lunch break and you and your friend are sharing food from each other’s tiffin boxes. Talk about what each of you brought, your favourite foods, and a time when sharing food made you happy.
Situation B — Sample:
Riya: What did you bring in your tiffin today?
Aarav: My mother made paneer paratha! Want to try some?
Riya: Yes, please! I have idli and chutney. Here, have one.
Aarav: Mmm, the chutney is so tasty! Your mother makes the best chutney.
Riya: Thank you! I think sharing food with a friend makes everything taste better.
Aarav: I agree. Remember when we shared our lunches on the school trip? That was the best meal ever!
Riya: Ha ha, yes! That is what friendship is all about — sharing and caring.
9. Writing Task — How My Friendship Started
Bloom: L6 CreateWrite a short paragraph (about 80 words) describing how your friendship with your best friend began. Use the guiding questions below:
- When did you first meet?
- Where did you meet — at school, in your neighbourhood, at an event?
- How did the friendship start — did something special happen?
- What makes this friendship important to you?
Word limit: About 80 words
Structure:
Sentence 1 — When and where you met
Sentence 2–3 — How the friendship began
Sentence 3–4 — A memorable moment together
Sentence 5 — Why this friendship matters to you
10. Explore — Famous Friendship Quotations
Bloom: L5 EvaluateRead these well-known sayings about friendship. Discuss with your partner what each one means and whether you agree with it:
Meaning: A person who helps you during difficult times is a true friend. It is easy to be friendly when everything is going well, but the test of real friendship comes during hardship.
Meaning: A good friend inspires you to be your finest self — more confident, kinder, and braver than you would be on your own. They see your potential and encourage you to reach it.
Which quotation do you connect with more? Why? Can you think of another saying about friendship that you have heard from your family or read in a book?
Frequently Asked Questions — A Friend's Prayer
What is A Friend's Prayer poem about in Class 6 Poorvi?
A Friend's Prayer is a poem from NCERT Class 6 English Poorvi Unit 2 Friendship. The speaker prays for the qualities needed to be a true friend: loyalty, kindness, patience, and understanding. Rather than asking for good friends, the poem focuses on becoming a good friend oneself. It reflects the idea that nurturing friendships requires effort, empathy, and genuine care for others.
What literary devices are in A Friend's Prayer poem?
A Friend's Prayer uses several literary devices: rhyme scheme to create a musical quality that makes the poem memorable, repetition to emphasise key wishes about friendship, imagery to paint pictures of what true friendship looks like, and a prayer format that gives the poem a sincere and reflective tone. These devices work together to convey the emotional depth of the friendship theme.
What is the central theme of A Friend's Prayer?
The central theme of A Friend's Prayer is that true friendship requires active effort and good character. Instead of wishing for friends, the speaker prays to become worthy of friendship by developing virtues like loyalty, patience, and kindness. The poem teaches Class 6 students that meaningful relationships are built through personal growth and genuine care for others.
What vocabulary words are important in A Friend's Prayer?
Important vocabulary from A Friend's Prayer includes words related to friendship qualities such as loyalty (faithfulness), compassion (caring deeply), patience (waiting calmly), understanding (seeing another's perspective), and trust (believing in someone). Learning these words helps students articulate what makes friendships meaningful in their own lives.
How does A Friend's Prayer connect to the Friendship unit theme?
A Friend's Prayer connects to the Unit 2 Friendship theme by presenting the ideal qualities of a good friend through poetry. While The Unlikely Best Friends shows friendship through a narrative, this poem takes a reflective approach. Together, the prose and poetry pieces in Unit 2 help Class 6 students understand friendship from multiple perspectives.