A magnificent tiger sits caged and helpless in a zoo — and through his stillness, Leslie Norris screams a loud message about freedom, dignity and the cruelty of locking up wild creatures.
Poet
Leslie Norris, a Welsh poet known for his love of nature and animals.
Genre
A short lyric poem of contrast — captivity versus freedom.
Setting
A cramped zoo cage at day, the silent zoo at night under the stars.
Central figure
The tiger — powerful by nature but reduced to a prisoner.
What the poem is about
"A Tiger in the Zoo" by Leslie Norris compares the life of a tiger trapped in a zoo with the life it should be living — free and fearless in the wild. The poem moves back and forth between these two pictures. In the cage the tiger can only walk a few quiet steps; in the jungle he would be hunting, hiding and ruling. By placing these two images side by side, the poet makes us feel deeply how wrong it is to imprison a wild animal. The tiger is not happy being looked at by visitors; he is a creature of power and pride who has been robbed of his natural world.
Stanza 1 — The caged tiger
The poem opens with the tiger pacing inside his cage. He moves softly on his "pads of velvet quiet", showing his graceful, silent movement. He is in a "quiet rage" — the word rage tells us he is furious, but it is quiet because he can do nothing about it. His anger is bottled up. The "few steps of his cage" remind us how tiny his world has become for such a big, free-spirited animal. Even his beautiful "stripes" and "pads" cannot be used the way nature intended.
Stanza 2 — What he could do in the wild
The poet now imagines what the tiger would be doing if he were free. He would be "lurking in shadow", sliding silently "through long grass" near a water hole, waiting to pounce on a "plump deer". This stanza is full of action and energy — the very opposite of the still, caged tiger. It shows the tiger as a skilful, natural hunter who belongs to the jungle, not a cement enclosure.
Stanza 3 — The tiger and humans
Here the poet imagines the tiger near a village. He would be "snarling around houses" and "baring his white fangs, his claws", showing his strength and giving a warning to people at the "jungle’s edge". This is the tiger as a force to be feared and respected. It contrasts sharply with the helpless animal of stanza one, who can frighten no one.
Stanza 4 — Back to the cage
The poem returns to reality. The tiger is locked "in a concrete cell", and his "strength behind bars" is wasted. He paces the "length of his cage", "ignoring visitors" who come to stare at him. He turns away from people, as if their curiosity means nothing to him. His pride keeps him distant even in captivity. The cold word "concrete" stresses how unnatural and harsh his prison is.
Stanza 5 — Night and the lost freedom
At night, when the zoo is silent, the tiger hears the "last voice" of the patrolling cars and stares "at the brilliant stars" with his "shining eyes". The stars stand for the vast, open, free world that is now far out of his reach. He looks up longingly at a freedom he can see but never touch. This quiet, sad ending leaves the reader feeling sympathy for the trapped animal and thinking about the cruelty of caging wild creatures.
The contrast technique
The whole poem is built on contrast. The caged tiger (stanzas 1, 4, 5) is shown as slow, silent, ignored and powerless. The free tiger (stanzas 2, 3) is shown as fast, fierce, feared and powerful. By switching between these two pictures, Norris makes the loss of freedom painfully clear. The free tiger acts; the caged tiger only watches, paces and stares. This structure is the heart of the poem’s meaning.
Tone and mood
The tone is sad and sympathetic. The poet clearly feels for the tiger and wants the reader to feel the same. There is also a note of quiet anger at human cruelty. The mood shifts from energetic (in the wild scenes) to gloomy and still (in the cage scenes), and ends on a longing, melancholy note as the tiger gazes at the stars.
- Stalking: walking softly and proudly in the cage — in "quiet rage".
- Lurking in shadow: hiding to ambush a "plump deer" near the water hole.
- Snarling / baring fangs: threatening the villagers at the jungle’s edge.
- Concrete cell: the cold, hard prison where his strength is wasted.
- Stars: a symbol of the lost, distant freedom he longs for at night.
- Pads of velvet quiet: his soft, silent paws.
How does the poet use contrast to bring out the theme of the poem? (long answer)
- State the technique: the poem is built on the contrast between the caged tiger and the free tiger.
- Give the caged images: pacing in a "few steps", "quiet rage", "concrete cell", "ignoring visitors", staring at "brilliant stars".
- Give the free images: "lurking in shadow", sliding through "long grass", hunting a "plump deer", "snarling" and "baring his white fangs" at the village.
- Explain the effect: the free tiger is active, fierce and feared; the caged tiger is still, silent and ignored.
What does the tiger do at night in the zoo, and what does it suggest?
- Describe the scene: the zoo is silent and the patrolling cars fall quiet.
- State the tiger’s action: he hears the "last voice" of the cars and stares at the "brilliant stars" with "shining eyes".
- Interpret the stars: they stand for the open, free world far beyond his cage.
- Conclude with the feeling: longing, sadness and loss of freedom.
Remember the order with "CAGE → WILD → CAGE": stanzas 1, 4 and 5 keep returning to the cage (quiet, concrete, stars), while stanzas 2 and 3 jump to the wild (deer, fangs, village). Cage-Wild-Cage = captivity wrapped around a memory of freedom.
Don’t just retell the story. Examiners want you to explain the contrast and the poetic devices (metaphor, alliteration, personification) and link them to the theme of freedom. Always support points with short quotations like "quiet rage" or "concrete cell".
Q1. What is the main theme of "A Tiger in the Zoo"?
Answer: The main theme is the contrast between freedom and captivity, and the cruelty of caging wild animals. The poem shows a powerful tiger who should be roaming free in the jungle but is instead locked in a tiny concrete cage. By comparing his caged life with the active, fearless life he could lead in the wild, Leslie Norris makes the reader feel how wrong it is to take away an animal’s natural freedom. The poem is a strong plea for the dignity and liberty of all wild creatures.
Q2. Identify and explain the poetic devices used in the poem.
Answer: The poem uses several devices. Metaphor: "pads of velvet quiet" compares his soft paws to velvet. Alliteration: repeated sounds in "stalks", "stripes", "shadow" and "brilliant... bars". Personification / human emotion: the tiger feels "quiet rage" and "ignores" visitors, as a person would. Imagery: vivid pictures like "plump deer", "white fangs", "concrete cell" and "brilliant stars" let us see and feel the two worlds. Symbolism: the stars symbolise the lost freedom. Contrast: the structure itself contrasts the wild tiger with the caged one. These devices together make the theme of lost freedom powerful and moving.
Q3. Why does the tiger ignore the visitors? What does this tell us about him?
Answer: The tiger ignores the visitors because he is proud and angry, and their curiosity means nothing to him. He paces "the length of his cage", refusing to entertain or even acknowledge the crowd that comes to stare. This tells us that, although he is a prisoner, his spirit is not broken — he keeps his dignity and pride. He does not behave like a tame pet; he remains a wild, self-respecting creature who turns away from the humans who have caged him. His indifference highlights the gulf between his noble nature and his humiliating captivity.
Q4. Describe the life the tiger would have led if he were free in the jungle.
Answer: If the tiger were free, he would live as a powerful, skilful hunter. He would be "lurking in shadow", sliding silently through the "long grass" near a water hole, waiting to spring on a "plump deer". He would also roam near villages at the "jungle’s edge", "snarling" and "baring his white fangs" and claws to warn and frighten people. His life would be full of action, energy, freedom and fear-inspiring power. This free, fierce life stands in painful contrast to his present existence, where he can only pace a few steps inside a concrete cell.
- ✅ Poet Leslie Norris contrasts a caged tiger with a free one.
- ✅ Caged: "quiet rage", "concrete cell", "ignoring visitors", staring at "brilliant stars".
- ✅ Free: hunting a "plump deer", "snarling", "baring his white fangs".
- ✅ Theme: freedom versus captivity; cruelty of caging wild animals.
- ✅ Devices: metaphor, alliteration, imagery, symbolism (stars), contrast.
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