The Pied Piper of Hamelin

About the Poem

'The Pied Piper of Hamelin' is a NARRATIVE POEM by Robert Browning (1812-1889). It tells the story of the German town of Hamelin, which was overrun by rats. A mysterious piper in colourful clothing arrives and offers to rid the town of rats for a fee.

'A NARRATIVE POEM tells a STORY. It has characters, a setting, a plot, and a conflict — just like a story in prose. Browning's poem is famous for its LIVELY rhythm and VIVID descriptions.'

Key Details

AspectDetail
PoetRobert Browning (English poet, 1812-1889)
TypeNarrative poem (story in verse)
SettingHamelin, a town in Germany
Main charactersPied Piper, Mayor, Townspeople, Children
ThemeHonesty, broken promises, consequences

Summary — Stanza by Stanza

The Rat Problem

'The town of Hamelin was in TROUBLE. Rats RAN through every street, kitchen, and bedroom. They fought the dogs, killed the cats, and bit the babies in their cradles.'

What the Rats DidEvidence from Poem
Infested EVERYWHERE'They fought the dogs and killed the cats'
Spoiled food'And spoiled the traders' goods'
Made sleep impossible'And made the women screech'
Took over the town'They overran the whole place'

The Pied Piper Arrives

A strange piper dressed in parti-coloured (PIED) clothing arrives in Hamelin. He claims he can charm away all the rats with his MAGICAL PIPE.

'The Piper's clothes were HALF yellow and HALF red — 'pied' means having TWO or MORE colours. This is why he is called the PIED Piper.'

The Piper Plays His Tune

The Piper plays on his pipe, and ALL the rats in Hamelin come running. He leads them through the streets and into the River Weser, where they DROWN.

VerseWhat Happens
First noteRats come OUT of everywhere — from houses, barns, and shops
MarchingThey follow the Piper through the streets
EndThe Piper leads them into the River Weser, and they ALL drown

The Broken Promise

'The Piper asks for his payment — ONE THOUSAND guilders. But the Mayor and the townspeople REFUSE to pay. They offer him only FIFTY guilders instead. The Piper is FURIOUS.'

'The Mayor said: 'We have to think of OTHER expenses. Fifty guilders is QUITE enough!' But the Piper knew a promise is a PROMISE.'

The Piper's Revenge

The Piper plays a NEW tune — this time, ALL the CHILDREN of Hamelin follow him. He leads them out of the town and into a MOUNTAIN, which opens and closes behind them. They are NEVER seen again.

'Only THREE children were left behind — one who was LAME and could not keep up, one who was DEAF and did not hear the music, and one who was DULL and had to go back for his coat. But the rest — ALL 130 of them — DISAPPEARED forever.'

Poetic Devices

DeviceExample from Poem
Rhyme'Rats! / They fought the dogs and killed the cats'
RhythmThe poem has a BOUNCY, lilting rhythm like a DANCE tune
ImageryVivid pictures of rats — 'black, brown, and grey with red whiskers'
RepetitionThe word 'rats' is repeated to EMPHASISE the infestation
PersonificationRats are given HUMAN-like behaviours

Themes and Messages

ThemeWhat It Teaches
The importance of honestyAlways KEEP your promises.
Consequences of greedThe Mayor's GREED caused the loss of the children.
Fair paymentPeople should be FAIRLY paid for their work.
Mystery and the unknownSome things in life CANNOT be explained.

Key Quotes

' "Rats! They fought the dogs and killed the cats, And bit the babies in the cradles." '

' "And ere three notes his pipe had uttered, you heard as if an army muttered." '

' "You promised me a THOUSAND guilders, but you offer me only FIFTY!" '

Exam Focus (ICSE Class 5)

TopicMarks (Typical)Question Type
Summary of the poem4-5 marksRetell the story in your own words
Character sketch of the Piper3-4 marksDescribe the Piper's appearance and actions
Theme — honesty and promises3-4 marksWhy is the poem about broken promises?
Poetic devices3 marksIdentify rhyme, rhythm, and imagery
Moral of the story2-3 marksWhat lesson does the poem teach?

Self-Test: 5 Questions

Q1. Why did the people of Hamelin want to get rid of the rats?

Q2. How did the Piper get rid of the rats?

Q3. Why did the Mayor refuse to pay the Piper the full amount?

Q4. What happened to the children of Hamelin at the end of the poem?

Q5. What lesson does the poem teach about keeping promises?

Answers

A1. The rats had OVERRUN the town — they fought the dogs, killed the cats, bit babies, and spoiled food. The people could not live peacefully.

A2. The Piper played a MAGICAL tune on his pipe. The rats followed him through the streets and into the River Weser, where they ALL drowned.

A3. The Mayor was GREEDY. He thought he could CHEAT the Piper by offering only 50 guilders instead of the promised 1,000.

A4. The Piper played a new tune, and ALL the children of Hamelin followed him into a mountain. The mountain closed behind them, and they were NEVER seen again.

A5. The poem teaches that we MUST keep our promises. Breaking a promise — especially after someone has done good work — has SERIOUS consequences.

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