NCERT Solutions for Class 10 English (First Flight) Poem 4: How to Tell Wild Animals (NCERT 2026–27)
Complete solutions for Class 10 English First Flight Poem 4 – “How to Tell Wild Animals” by Carolyn Wells: a short original summary, the central theme, word meanings and every Thinking about the Poem question answered in full. The textbook questions are reproduced exactly as in the NCERT book; the explanations and answers are written originally by ClearStudy.
About the poet
Carolyn Wells (1862–1942) was an American writer and poet known for her humorous and light verse as well as her popular mystery novels. She wrote a great many books during her lifetime, and is especially remembered for her witty, playful poetry and parodies. “How to Tell Wild Animals” is a fine example of her comic style, in which she uses absurd advice and clever wordplay to amuse the reader while gently mocking the idea of ‘identifying’ dangerous beasts at close range.
Summary
“How to Tell Wild Animals” is a humorous poem in which the poet pretends to give the reader a handy guide for recognising various wild animals. The joke, of course, is that her ‘tips’ require you to get dangerously close to the very creatures that can kill you, so the ‘identification’ happens just as the animal attacks.
The poet says that if you travel to the jungles of the east and a large, tawny beast comes towards you and roars while you are dying, you will know it is the Asian Lion. If a magnificent beast with black stripes on a yellow body greets you and eats you, that is how you recognise the Bengal Tiger. If a creature whose skin is dotted with spots leaps on you, it is the Leopard, and crying out in pain will not help because it will only keep leaping. If, in your own yard, a creature hugs you very hard, it is surely a Bear, and any further doubt will be cleared by one more crushing ‘caress’.
The poet then explains how to tell beasts of prey apart even though a beginner might be confused. The Crocodile and the Hyena can be distinguished by their expressions: the Hyena comes with a merry smile, while the Crocodile sheds tears even as it devours its victim. Finally, the small Chameleon, a lizard-like creature with no ears and no wings, can be identified by the fact that if you look at a tree and see nothing there, it is the well-camouflaged Chameleon. Through this nonsense the poet creates laughter from both the funny ideas and her clever, deliberately wrong use of language.
Theme & message
The poem is pure humour and nonsense verse: its purpose is to entertain, not to instruct. The deeper charm lies in how language is used – the poet twists spellings (‘dyin’, ‘lept’, ‘lep’) and bends grammar (“A novice might nonplus”) to force comic rhymes and rhythm. The message, if any, is light: the ‘rules’ for telling animals apart are useless because you only learn the answer at the very moment the animal harms you. The poem celebrates wit, wordplay and the freedom poets take with language.
Word meanings
| Word | Meaning |
|---|---|
| tawny | yellowish-brown in colour |
| beast | a wild animal |
| dyin’ (dying) | losing one’s life |
| roaming | wandering about |
| discern | make out; identify |
| strolling forth | walking out leisurely |
| hide | an animal’s skin |
| peppered | here, covered with spots |
| lept / lep (leapt / leap) | jumped / jump |
| hugs | holds tightly in the arms |
| caress | a gentle, loving touch |
| beasts of prey | animals that hunt others for food |
| novice | someone new to a job; a beginner |
| (be) nonplus(sed) | (be) puzzled, confused, surprised |
| merry | cheerful; happy |
| weep | cry; shed tears |
| chameleon | a small lizard that changes colour to blend in |
| ground | here, background |
| ’Tis / ’Twill | old/poetic forms of ‘It is’ / ‘It will’ |
Thinking about the Poem
Questions reproduced verbatim from the NCERT First Flight textbook; answers written originally by ClearStudy.
1. Does ‘dyin’’ really rhyme with ‘lion’? Can you say it in such a way that it does?
2. How does the poet suggest that you identify the lion and the tiger? When can you do so, according to him?
3. Do you think the words ‘lept‘ and ‘lep’ in the third stanza are spelt correctly? Why does the poet spell them like this?
4. Do you know what a ‘bearhug’ is? It’s a friendly and strong hug – such as bears are thought to give, as they attack you! Again, hyenas are thought to laugh, and crocodiles to weep (‘crocodile tears’) as they swallow their victims. Are there similar expressions and popular ideas about wild animals in your own language(s)?
5. Look at the line “A novice might nonplus”. How would you write this ‘correctly’? Why is the poet’s ‘incorrect’ line better in the poem?
6. Can you find other examples of poets taking liberties with language, either in English or in your own language(s)? Can you find examples of humorous poems in your own language(s)?
7. Much of the humour in the poem arises from the way language is used, although the ideas are funny as well. If there are particular lines in the poem that you especially like, share these with the class, speaking briefly about what it is about the ideas or the language that you like or find funny.
Extra questions
Short answer
1. What is the tone of the poem ‘How to Tell Wild Animals’?
2. How can one recognise a Leopard, according to the poet?
3. How does the poet describe a Bear’s way of ‘greeting’ you?
4. How can a Crocodile be told apart from a Hyena?
5. How can one identify a Chameleon, according to the poem?
Long answer
6. How does the poet create humour in ‘How to Tell Wild Animals’? Explain with examples.
7. The poem is an example of nonsense verse. Discuss what makes it so and what the poet’s real purpose is.
MCQs & Assertion–Reason
1. Who is the poet of ‘How to Tell Wild Animals’?
(a) John Berryman (b) Robert Frost (c) Carolyn Wells (d) Leslie Norris
2. The poem is best described as a:
(a) tragic poem (b) humorous / nonsense poem (c) patriotic poem (d) nature elegy
3. According to the poet, you know a beast is the Asian Lion when:
(a) it has spots (b) it hugs you (c) it roars at you as you are dying (d) it weeps
4. The Bengal Tiger is described as having:
(a) a spotted hide (b) black stripes on a yellow ground (c) a tawny coat (d) no ears or wings
5. ‘A beast whose hide with spots is peppered’ refers to the:
(a) Bear (b) Hyena (c) Leopard (d) Crocodile
6. Which animal ‘hugs you very, very hard’?
(a) the Lion (b) the Bear (c) the Tiger (d) the Chameleon
7. According to the poem, a Hyena comes with a ______, while a Crocodile ______.
(a) tear; smiles (b) merry smile; weeps (c) roar; hugs (d) spot; leaps
8. The word ‘novice’ in the poem means:
(a) an expert (b) a beginner (c) a hunter (d) a teacher
9. The Chameleon can be identified because:
(a) it has long ears (b) it has big wings (c) if there is nothing on the tree, it is the Chameleon (d) it roars loudly
10. Most of the humour in the poem arises from:
(a) the rhyme scheme alone (b) the way language is used and the absurd ideas (c) its sad ending (d) its long descriptions
Assertion–Reason – choose: (a) A and R true, R explains A; (b) A and R true, R does not explain A; (c) A true, R false; (d) A false, R true.
1. Assertion (A): ‘How to Tell Wild Animals’ is a humorous poem.
Reason (R): The poet gives absurd advice for identifying animals only at the moment they attack you.
2. Assertion (A): The poet spells ‘dying’ as ‘dyin’’ and ‘leapt’ as ‘lept’.
Reason (R): She does this to create rhymes with ‘lion’ and ‘Leopard’ and to keep the humorous tone.
3. Assertion (A): The poem gives a practical, reliable guide for recognising wild animals.
Reason (R): Each ‘rule’ in the poem can be applied safely from a distance.
4. Assertion (A): A Crocodile can be told apart from a Hyena by its expression.
Reason (R): The Hyena comes with a merry smile, while the Crocodile weeps as it eats.
5. Assertion (A): The line “A novice might nonplus” is grammatically incorrect.
Reason (R): ‘Nonplus’ should be used in the passive (‘be nonplussed’), but the poet bends grammar for rhyme.
Exam tips
Score full marks on this poem
• Remember the poet’s name – Carolyn Wells – and that this is a humorous / nonsense poem.
• Learn the animals in order: Asian Lion, Bengal Tiger, Leopard, Bear, Crocodile & Hyena, Chameleon, and the comic ‘way’ to identify each.
• For value-based or HOTS questions, focus on how language is used – intentional misspellings (‘dyin’’, ‘lept’, ‘lep’) and bent grammar (‘nonplus’) – as the chief source of humour.
• Use short quoted phrases (not the whole poem) to support your answers, and keep explanations in your own words.
FAQs
Who wrote ‘How to Tell Wild Animals’?
The poem was written by the American poet Carolyn Wells, who was famous for her humorous and nonsense verse.
What is the central idea of ‘How to Tell Wild Animals’?
It is a humorous nonsense poem that pretends to teach the reader how to identify wild animals, but each ‘rule’ works only when the animal is already attacking, which makes the advice both absurd and funny.
Why does the poet misspell words like ‘dyin’’, ‘lept’ and ‘lep’?
She misspells them deliberately to create rhymes with ‘lion’ and ‘Leopard’ and to keep the playful, humorous rhythm of the poem – a liberty poets often take with language.
Questions are taken verbatim from the NCERT First Flight textbook; the summary, explanations and answers are written originally by ClearStudy. No full copyrighted poem text is reproduced.
