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.
What a Bird Thought — A Poem About Growing Up
A baby bird journeys from its egg shell to the open sky, discovering how big the world really is. Let us prepare to read this poem.
| Sentence | Word Choices |
|---|---|
| The colour of the feather was not dark but pale. | at last / light / labour / fluttered |
| The butterfly moved lightly and quickly onto the flower. | (same choices) |
| Finally, I finished my bird painting after many tries. | (same choices) |
| The flowers were the prize for the gardener's hard work. | (same choices) |
- Where do you see birds? What are they usually doing?
- Do you want to fly like a bird? Why or why not?
- What do you think a baby bird inside an egg might think about its world?
1. Birds can be seen in trees, gardens, and open fields. They are often flying, singing, or searching for food.
2. Flying would be wonderful — it would mean seeing the whole world from above, like a map come to life!
3. Inside an egg, a baby bird might think the entire world is the smooth blue shell surrounding it — small, round, and complete.
Write your predictions before reading, then check them after!
Let Us Read — The Full Poem
Understanding the Poem — Stanza by Stanza
Theme Web — Ideas in the Poem
Central Themes: Discovery and Growing Up
The poem explores how our understanding of the world grows as we gain new experiences.
Literary Devices in the Poem
Vivid Word Pictures
The poem creates clear mental pictures: a pale blue eggshell, a warm straw nest, green leaves outside, and the open sky. We can "see" the bird's world at each stage.
Example: "pale, blue shell"
"I have been very blind"
"Blind" does not mean physically unable to see. It is a metaphor for being unaware or ignorant. The bird realises it could not see beyond its immediate surroundings.
Line 12: "I have been very blind."
The Bird's Journey
The bird's journey from egg → nest → tree → sky symbolises the journey of all living beings — from childhood innocence to adult understanding. It represents human growth.
The four stages mirror four phases of life.
ABCB Pattern
The poem follows an ABCB rhyme scheme — lines 2 and 4 rhyme in each stanza: well/shell, other/mother, find/blind, labours/neighbours.
This gives the poem a gentle, song-like rhythm.
Word Power — Vocabulary Engine
Key Words from the Poem
Literature CBQ — Extract-Based Questions
CBQ Set 1 — Stanzas 1 & 2
And nestled by my mother."
CBQ Set 2 — Stanzas 3 & 4
I have been very blind.
At length I flew beyond the tree,
Quite fit for grown-up labours,
I don't know how the world is made,
And neither do my neighbours."
Thinking About the Text
Comprehension Exercises — Let Us Think and Reflect
I. True or False:
1. The bird changed its house two times.
2. The neighbours tell the bird about the world.
II. Answer these questions:
Q. Why did the baby bird think its first world was small, round, and blue?
Q. Where did the bird go when it fluttered from its straw nest?
Q. What quality did the bird say it had when it flew away?
Language Workshop — Rhyme and Describing Words
Rhyming Words & Adjectives from the Poem
Words that end with the same sound are called rhyming words. In this poem, lines 2 and 4 of each stanza rhyme (ABCB pattern):
The poet uses adjectives to describe the bird's world at each stage:
- pale — describes the colour of the eggshell (not bright, softly coloured)
- little — describes the house (egg) and nest (small, tiny)
- blue — describes the shell (colour of the egg interior)
- grown-up — describes the labours (work done by adults, not children)
Exercise: Write describing words for birds
Use the word box: pointed, green, thin, brown, small, wooden, hanging, round
2. A brown sparrow sat on the thin branch.
3. The bird built a hanging nest under the roof.
4. The parrot had green feathers and a pointed beak.
But one thing I surely know,
Whenever I wish to rest,
My little nest is the best.
Let Us Write — Creative Writing
Write About Your World — As a Baby / As a Fish
The bird perceived its world through its experiences. How would a baby or a fish perceive their world? Write five sentences for either a baby or a fish.
Describe:
• What does your world look like? (size, colour, shape)
• What can you hear / feel / sense?
• What do you think the world is made of?
• What is beyond your world? (Do you know?)
Word Limit: 5 sentences (50–60 words)
Sample Response — A Baby's World
Let Us Speak — Which Bird Would You Be?
Choose a bird and speak about it using these prompts:
- Which bird are you? — "I am a…"
- What do you look like? — "I am … in colour. I have …"
- Where do you live? — "I live in … It is …"
- What do you do during the day? — "I … I also …"
- Message for humans: — "I want to tell humans …"
Frequently Asked Questions
What is What a Bird Thought — Poem about in NCERT English?
What a Bird Thought — 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 What a Bird Thought — Poem?
Key vocabulary words from What a Bird Thought — 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 What a Bird Thought — Poem?
What a Bird Thought — 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 What a Bird Thought — 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 What a Bird Thought — Poem help in board exam preparation?
What a Bird Thought — 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.