NCERT Solutions for Class 12 English (Flamingo) Poem 5: Aunt Jennifer’s Tigers (NCERT 2026–27)

Complete solutions for Class 12 English Flamingo Poem 5 – “Aunt Jennifer’s Tigers” by Adrienne Rich: an original stanza-wise summary, theme and message, hard word meanings, and every “Think it out” textbook question answered in full, exam-ready detail. We keep the questions exactly as printed in the NCERT book and add extra questions, MCQs, Assertion–Reason items and FAQs for board-exam practice.

Class: 12 Subject: English Book: Flamingo Type: Poem (Poem 5) Poet: Adrienne Rich Session: 2026–27

About the poet

Adrienne Rich (1929–2012) was an American poet, essayist and feminist thinker, born in Baltimore, Maryland. She is among the most influential voices of the twentieth-century women’s movement, publishing nineteen volumes of poetry along with collections of essays. Her writing carries a strong resistance to racism, militarism and the silencing of women. “Aunt Jennifer’s Tigers” is one of her early poems and a celebrated study of how marriage and patriarchal expectation can confine a woman’s spirit, while her art remains free.

Summary

The poem contrasts two worlds: the bold, free animals that Aunt Jennifer embroiders, and the timid, burdened life of Aunt Jennifer herself. In the first stanza, the speaker describes the tigers that “prance across a screen” in Aunt Jennifer’s needlework. They are golden, set against a green background, and they move with fearless grace. Unlike their maker, they “do not fear the men beneath the tree” and pace with a calm, “chivalric certainty”. The tigers are everything Aunt Jennifer is not—confident, unafraid and proud.

The second stanza turns to Aunt Jennifer herself. Her fingers flutter nervously as she works the wool, and she finds even the light ivory needle “hard to pull”. This difficulty is not physical alone; it reflects the heavy psychological weight she carries. The poet names that weight directly: the “massive weight of Uncle’s wedding band / Sits heavily upon Aunt Jennifer’s hand”. Marriage, instead of being a source of joy, has become a burden that crushes her energy and confidence.

The final stanza looks ahead to Aunt Jennifer’s death. Even then, her “terrified hands” will remain “ringed with ordeals she was mastered by”—the trials of her married life will mark her forever. Yet the tigers she created will outlive her and “go on prancing, proud and unafraid”. The poem thus ends on a note of quiet triumph: although the woman is defeated by an oppressive social order, the art born of her imagination escapes that oppression and lives on, free and fearless.

Theme & message

The central theme is the oppression of women within a patriarchal institution of marriage and the liberating, lasting power of art. Aunt Jennifer is timid, fearful and weighed down, but the tigers she stitches are everything she cannot be in real life. Through this contrast Rich suggests that creative expression allows the spirit to break free of social chains, even when the body and the person cannot. The poem is also a feminist statement: it exposes how the “wedding band” can become a symbol of constraint rather than love, and it argues that the human urge for freedom, embodied in art, outlives the systems that try to suppress it.

Word meanings

Word / PhraseMeaning
prancemove about happily and proudly, with springing steps
screenhere, the embroidered cloth panel / tapestry
topaza yellow-brown gemstone; here, the golden colour of the tigers
denizensinhabitants; creatures that belong to a particular place
sleeksmooth, glossy and elegant
chivalricrelating to the courage, honour and dignity of medieval knights
certaintyconfidence; the state of being sure and unafraid
flutteringmoving with quick, nervous, trembling motions
woolthe yarn used for embroidery / knitting
ivory needlea needle made of ivory; though light, it feels hard to pull
massivevery heavy and large
wedding bandthe wedding ring; here, a symbol of the burden of marriage
sits heavilyweighs down; presses with great weight
terrifiedfilled with fear
ringedencircled / surrounded; also wearing the wedding ring
ordealspainful, difficult experiences; trials
mastered bycontrolled, dominated and overpowered by
panelthe framed piece of embroidered cloth
unafraidwithout fear

Think it out

Questions reproduced verbatim from the NCERT Flamingo textbook; answers written originally by ClearStudy.

1. How do ‘denizens’ and ‘chivalric’ add to our understanding of the tiger’s attitudes?

ANSWERThe word ‘denizens’ means inhabitants who belong fully and rightfully to a place. It tells us that the tigers are completely at home in their “world of green”; they are settled, secure and confident, as if the jungle is theirs by right.The word ‘chivalric’ compares the tigers to noble medieval knights who acted with courage, honour and dignity. It suggests that the tigers move with proud, fearless self-assurance.Together the two words present the tigers as bold, dignified and utterly unafraid—a deliberate contrast to the timid, fearful Aunt Jennifer who created them.

2. Why do you think Aunt Jennifer’s hands are ‘fluttering through her wool’ in the second stanza? Why is she finding the needle so hard to pull?

ANSWERAunt Jennifer’s hands ‘flutter’ because they tremble with nervousness, fear and exhaustion. Years of oppression in her married life have made her timid and anxious, so even a simple, delicate task makes her hands shake.She finds the light ivory needle “hard to pull” not because of its physical weight but because of the psychological weight she carries. The strain of her unhappy, dominated existence has drained her energy and confidence, so the smallest effort feels heavy and difficult.

3. What is suggested by the image ‘massive weight of Uncle’s wedding band’?

ANSWERA wedding ring is small and light, so calling it a “massive weight” is deliberately ironic. The image suggests that marriage itself has become a crushing burden for Aunt Jennifer rather than a bond of love and joy.The wedding band symbolises the oppressive grip of her husband and of patriarchal married life. Its “massive weight” presses down on her hand and her spirit, robbing her of freedom and confidence and reducing her to a fearful, dominated figure.

4. Of what or of whom is Aunt Jennifer terrified with in the third stanza?

ANSWERAunt Jennifer is terrified of her oppressive married life and the male dominance she has had to endure. The fear is so deep-rooted that the poet says even after death her hands will still be “terrified”.She is afraid of the constant ordeals and constraints imposed on her—the authority of her husband (“Uncle”) and the demands of a patriarchal society that have ruled and exhausted her throughout her life.

5. What are the ‘ordeals’ Aunt Jennifer is surrounded by, why is it significant that the poet uses the word ‘ringed’? What are the meanings of the word ‘ringed’ in the poem?

ANSWERThe ‘ordeals’ are the painful trials of her married life—the duties, restrictions, fear and male domination that she had to bear without escape. These struggles “mastered” her, controlling her completely.The word ‘ringed’ is significant because it carries a double meaning:(i) It refers literally to the wedding ring on her finger—the symbol of her marriage.(ii) It means encircled / surrounded, suggesting that the ordeals trapped her on all sides, like a prison from which she could not break free.Thus ‘ringed’ cleverly links the wedding ring with the encircling trials of marriage, showing that the very symbol of her marriage became the cause of her lifelong confinement.

6. Why do you think Aunt Jennifer created animals that are so different from her own character? What might the poet be suggesting, through this difference?

ANSWERAunt Jennifer created tigers that are bold, free and fearless because they represent everything she wishes she could be but cannot be in real life. In her own existence she is timid and oppressed, so through her art she expresses a hidden longing for freedom and strength.Through this contrast the poet suggests that the human spirit’s desire for freedom cannot be entirely crushed. Even a woman dominated by a patriarchal order can give voice to her suppressed dreams through her creativity. Art becomes an outlet for what life denies her, and it preserves the free spirit that society tried to chain.

7. Interpret the symbols found in this poem.

ANSWERThe tigers symbolise freedom, courage, strength and the fearless, unrestrained spirit—the qualities Aunt Jennifer lacks in life.The wedding band symbolises the burden and bondage of marriage and male domination, not love.Aunt Jennifer’s fluttering, terrified hands symbolise her weakness, fear and the oppression she has suffered.The word ‘ringed’ symbolises being encircled and trapped by the ordeals of married life.The embroidered panel that outlives her symbolises the lasting, liberating power of art, which survives long after the artist’s death and remains forever free.

8. Do you sympathise with Aunt Jennifer. What is the attitude of the speaker towards Aunt Jennifer?

ANSWERYes, the reader naturally sympathises with Aunt Jennifer. She is a gentle, creative woman crushed by the weight of an oppressive marriage; her fear, her trembling hands and her lifelong ordeals move us to pity, while her free, fearless tigers make us admire her hidden strength.The speaker’s attitude is one of deep sympathy and quiet protest. The poet observes Aunt Jennifer’s suffering with compassion and gently criticises the patriarchal system that “mastered” her. At the same time the speaker celebrates her art, which triumphs over her oppression and lives on, proud and unafraid.

Extra questions

Short answer

1. Who is Aunt Jennifer, and what is she doing in the poem?

ANSWERAunt Jennifer is an oppressed married woman who is embroidering a panel of bright, fearless tigers on a screen. Her art reveals the free spirit she cannot express in her own confined life.

2. How are the tigers described in the first stanza?

ANSWERThe tigers are golden (“topaz”) creatures set against a green world. They are fearless, do not fear the men beneath the tree, and move with sleek, proud, “chivalric certainty”.

3. What contrast lies at the heart of the poem?

ANSWERThe poem contrasts the bold, free, fearless tigers with their timid, fearful and oppressed creator, Aunt Jennifer—highlighting the gap between her suppressed life and her free imagination.

4. Why does the poet say the tigers will “go on prancing”?

ANSWERIt shows that art outlives the artist. Even after Aunt Jennifer’s death, the tigers in her embroidery will remain “proud and unafraid”, free of the ordeals that defeated her.

5. What does the poem reveal about Aunt Jennifer’s married life?

ANSWERIt reveals that her marriage was oppressive and fearful. The “massive weight” of the wedding band and the “ordeals she was mastered by” show that she lived under constant male domination and constraint.

Long answer

6. “Aunt Jennifer’s Tigers” is a feminist poem. Discuss.

ANSWERThe poem is strongly feminist because it exposes the oppression of women within patriarchal marriage. Aunt Jennifer is timid, fearful and exhausted; her hands “flutter” and even a light needle feels hard to pull. The “massive weight of Uncle’s wedding band” turns the symbol of marriage into a symbol of bondage, showing how the institution has crushed her spirit. The word “ringed” suggests she is encircled by ordeals that “mastered” her. Yet Rich also gives the poem a note of resistance: the tigers Aunt Jennifer creates are everything she is denied—bold, free and unafraid—and they survive her death. The poet thus protests against the silencing of women while affirming that the female desire for freedom, expressed through art, cannot finally be destroyed.

7. How does art triumph over oppression in the poem?

ANSWERThroughout her life Aunt Jennifer is dominated and defeated; the poem says her hands will remain “terrified” and “ringed with ordeals” even after death. Her own self is mastered by an oppressive social order. But her art escapes that order. The tigers she embroidered are confident, dignified and free, and the poet promises they “will go on prancing, proud and unafraid” long after she is gone. In this way her creativity outlives both her suffering and her life. The poem suggests that while a person may be crushed by circumstance, the free spirit and longing for liberty embodied in true art are permanent and cannot be subdued—art becomes a lasting triumph over human oppression.

8. Comment on the title “Aunt Jennifer’s Tigers”.

ANSWERThe title is deeply meaningful. The tigers “belong” to Aunt Jennifer because she has created them, yet they are utterly unlike her—fearless where she is fearful, free where she is bound. The possessive “Aunt Jennifer’s” links the timid woman with the bold creatures, drawing attention to the central irony of the poem. The title therefore points to the contrast between an oppressed life and a free imagination, and hints that the tigers are an extension of the suppressed self that Aunt Jennifer can only release through her art.

MCQs & Assertion–Reason

1. Who is the poet of “Aunt Jennifer’s Tigers”?

(a) Kamala Das   (b) Adrienne Rich   (c) John Keats   (d) Pablo Neruda

2. The tigers in Aunt Jennifer’s embroidery are described as the colour of:

(a) ivory   (b) emerald   (c) topaz   (d) silver

3. The tigers move with “sleek __________ certainty”.

(a) royal   (b) chivalric   (c) golden   (d) fearful

4. What does the “massive weight of Uncle’s wedding band” symbolise?

(a) wealth   (b) love   (c) the burden of marriage   (d) old age

5. Aunt Jennifer’s hands are described as:

(a) strong   (b) fluttering and terrified   (c) calm   (d) golden

6. The word “denizens” in the poem means:

(a) hunters   (b) prisoners   (c) inhabitants   (d) strangers

7. What does the word “ringed” suggest in the poem?

(a) only a wedding ring   (b) only being encircled   (c) both the wedding ring and being encircled by ordeals   (d) a circle of friends

8. After Aunt Jennifer’s death, the tigers will:

(a) disappear   (b) go on prancing, proud and unafraid   (c) become tame   (d) fade away

9. The central theme of the poem is:

(a) love of nature   (b) oppression of women and the freedom of art   (c) patriotism   (d) friendship

10. The tigers are a symbol of:

(a) fear   (b) bondage   (c) freedom and fearlessness   (d) death

Answer key: 1-(b), 2-(c), 3-(b), 4-(c), 5-(b), 6-(c), 7-(c), 8-(b), 9-(b), 10-(c).

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): Aunt Jennifer’s tigers are bold and unafraid.

Reason (R): They represent the free, fearless spirit that Aunt Jennifer cannot express in her own life.

2. Assertion (A): Aunt Jennifer finds even the light ivory needle hard to pull.

Reason (R): The needle is made of very heavy metal.

3. Assertion (A): The wedding band is described as a “massive weight”.

Reason (R): Marriage has become a crushing burden of oppression for Aunt Jennifer.

4. Assertion (A): The tigers will go on prancing even after Aunt Jennifer’s death.

Reason (R): Art outlives the artist and keeps the free spirit alive.

5. Assertion (A): The speaker shows no sympathy for Aunt Jennifer.

Reason (R): The poet criticises the patriarchal order that “mastered” Aunt Jennifer.

Answer key: 1-(a), 2-(c) [A true, R false – the difficulty is psychological, not because the needle is heavy], 3-(a), 4-(a), 5-(d) [A is false – the speaker is deeply sympathetic; R is true].

Exam tips

How to score full marks

1. Always build your answers around the central contrast: the free, fearless tigers vs. the timid, oppressed Aunt Jennifer.

2. Learn the key symbols—tigers (freedom), wedding band (bondage of marriage), “ringed” (encircled by ordeals + wedding ring), the surviving panel (immortality of art).

3. Use short, exact quotations such as “chivalric certainty”, “massive weight of Uncle’s wedding band” and “proud and unafraid” to support your points.

4. Remember the feminist theme: oppression of women in patriarchal marriage and the liberating, lasting power of art.

5. For the “hard to pull needle” question, stress that the difficulty is psychological, not physical—a common board-exam trap.

FAQs

What is the main theme of “Aunt Jennifer’s Tigers”?

The poem deals with the oppression of women within patriarchal marriage and the contrasting, liberating power of art, which outlives the artist and remains free.

What do the tigers symbolise in the poem?

The tigers symbolise freedom, courage and the fearless spirit—everything Aunt Jennifer longs for but cannot achieve in her own oppressed life.

Why is the wedding band called a “massive weight”?

Though a ring is small and light, calling it “massive” is ironic and shows that marriage has become a crushing burden of male domination rather than a bond of love.

Questions are taken verbatim from the NCERT Flamingo textbook; summaries and answers are written originally by ClearStudy.

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