Chapter Summary
Chapter Summary
Chapter Summary
Chapter II Summary
Chapter II begins when the author, now a pilot, has an accident that
lands him in the middle of the Sahara Desert. He begins to work on
his plane, in hope of fixing the engine before his supply of water runs
out. He sleeps on the desert sand that night and when he awakens he
hears a voice saying, "If you please--draw me a sheep!" The pilot tells
the prince that he cannot draw, but the little prince says that doesn't
matter. So the pilot shows the prince something he has drawn before:
the boa constrictor from the outside, with the elephant not showing
except as a bulge. The prince immediately recognizes it for exactly
what it is and the pilot is encouraged. He then draws his best sheep
and gives it to.....
Chapter IV Summary
The pilot discusses some of the differences in the way adults and
children behave. He goes on to explain a bit more about the book he
is writing and why he chose to write it. His purpose in writing the
book is as much, he says, to remember the little prince as to write a
book. He talks about having been discouraged from drawing when he
was a child and reminds us that children understand what is important
much better than adults do. He expresses his concern that he might
be in.....
Chapter V Summary
This chapter provides the reader with some detail of life on the small
planet inhabited by the little prince. It seems that the sheep he is so
keen on acquiring is meant to eat little baobab bushes. Baobabs,
apparently, if left unattended, grow so large that they threaten to
take over the little prince's entire planet. Therefore, the prince spends
a great deal of time removing the small baobab bushes as soon as he
finds them. It is a matter of discipline. As the little prince points out,
"When you've finished your own toilet in the morning, then it is time
to attend to the toilet of your planet, just so, with the greatest care."
The little.....
Chapter VI Summary
The pilot discovers the prince's love of sunsets. The little prince tells
the pilot he can see the sunset as many times a day as he likes,
because his planet is so small that by merely moving a chair a few
feet, he can be on the other side of the small globe. One day, he tells
the pilot he saw the sun set forty-four times. The prince also
confesses he is.....
Chapter IX Summary
This chapter takes the reader back to the preparations made by the
little prince just prior to departing his planet to begin his journey.
First, he cleans out his volcanoes (which tend to erupt now and again
if not tended to.) Then he plucks the baobabs he can see. His final
task is watering and covering his flower with the protective glass
globe she had earlier insisted upon. But just as he is about to lower
the globe over his flower, she speaks. Her words are of love and
forgiveness. She does not rebuke him for leaving but says she
understands and she will be fine.
Chapter IX Analysis
The flower has finally come.....
Chapter X Summary
The first stop on the prince's journey is a small planet ruled by a king.
The king has no subjects. Naturally, when the little prince appears,
the king is quite pleased. He explains to the prince all the orders he
gives must be obeyed, but he also takes pains to make it known that
if his orders are not followed, it is his own fault for issuing poor
instructions. When the prince yawns, the king orders him to yawn
more. When the prince says he cannot force a yawn, he is ordered to
yawn sometimes, rather than on command. The king is very good and
amiable. Still, he is a grown up, and as such he has a grown up flaw:
he must control. Having no one and nothing on his planet over.....
Chapter XI Summary
In this chapter the little prince encounters a man so conceited that he
can hear only praise. He asks the little prince to praise him, and the
little prince complies. But it is a boring way to spend a day and after a
very short visit, the little prince takes his leave.
Chapter XI Analysis
This is a simpler.....
Chapter XV Summary
When the little prince visits his sixth planet, he meets a geographer.
The little prince asks the geographer what a geographer does and is
treated to a thorough description. Expecting the geographer's
expertise to have resulted in some exciting discoveries, the little
prince asks him how many rivers and lakes and mountains are on his
planet. But the geographer cannot tell him. It seems that while his
credentials as a geographer are not in question, a lack of explorers
makes it impossible for him to catalogue anything. A geographer, he
explains to the little prince, cannot be bothered with exploring. That is
too mundane a task for one as important as a geographer. So the
little prince tells the geographer about life on his own planet and
about his flower and his volcanoes......
Chapter XX Summary
The little prince finds a rose garden and is surprised to learn that his
flower is not unique. Yet at the same time he realizes that her need to
be seen as unique is very strong--so strong, in fact, that should he fail
to fulfill caring for her appropriately, she will wither and die. Saddened
by the knowledge that his flower is not unique, and a little depressed
about the relatively small size.....