Class 08 – Chapter 04 :

Hope is the Thing with Feathers – Notes

Let’s Rewind and Rejoice – Questions and Answers

1. What is hope compared to in the poem?
→ Hope is compared to a bird with feathers that lives in the soul.

2. What do you think the poet means by the words, ‘Hope… perches in the soul’?
→ It means that hope lives deep within our hearts and minds, silently giving us strength.

3. What is special about the song that the bird sings?
→ The bird’s song is sweet, comforting, and never-ending—even in storms.

4. How is the bird’s song heard in the gale?
→ Even in strong, violent winds, the bird’s song (hope) is still heard sweetly.

5. Where has the poet heard the bird’s song?
→ She has heard it in the coldest lands and on the strangest seas.

6. What do “chillest land” and “strangest sea” represent?
→ They represent the hardest times or difficult situations in life.


Let’s Appreciate – Questions and Answers

1. What does the storm indicate in the poem?
→ The storm symbolizes life’s problems, troubles, or painful moments.

2. What does the poet mean by the lines “…never, in extremity, it asked a crumb of me”?
→ It means that even during the worst times, hope never asks for anything in return.

3. How do the images of the bird and the storm help us understand the poem?
→ The bird shows hope and comfort, while the storm shows challenges. Together, they show that hope survives even during struggles.


Let’s Recall and Recreate

Activity 1

A. Read these lines:

Hope is the thing with feathers / That perches in the soul…
What picture do you get?
→ The poet creates the image of a tiny bird sitting in our hearts, always singing and giving us strength.


B. Complete the table of imagery:

Kinds of ImageryExamples
Tactile (Touch)smooth, soft
Olfactory (Smell)fragrance, rose scent
Visual (Sight)colours, feathers, storm
Auditory (Sound)music, tune, gale, singing
Gustatory (Taste)sweet, sour, crumb

C. List images from the poem:

ImagesLines from the poem
Visual“Hope is the thing with feathers”
Auditory“And sings the tune without the words”“And sweetest in the gale is heard”

Activity 2 – Rhyming Pairs

A. Do the endings of those words sound alike?

→ Yes. “heard” and “bird” are rhyming words.

B. Find other rhyming pairs:

  • heard – bird
  • storm – warm
  • sea – me
  • soul – all

Activity 3 – Metaphors

A. What is hope compared to?

→ Hope is compared to a bird.

B. Other instances of metaphor in the poem:

  • “Hope is the thing with feathers”
  • “That perches in the soul”
  • “It sings the tune without the words”

C. Add your own metaphors:

  • Time is a thief.
  • The world is a stage.
  • Laughter is sunshine.

Activity 4 – Anaphora (Repetition)

A. Lines:

And sings the tune without the words, / And never stops at all…
What effect does the repetition create?
→ It emphasizes the strength and constant nature of hope.

B. Other instances of anaphora:

  • “And sweetest in the gale is heard”
  • “And sore must be the storm”

(Use of “And” at the beginning creates rhythm and emphasis.)


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