Class 8 English

Chapter 1 — The Best Christmas Present in the World

Open PDFReads in your browser
Overview

Summary

Chapter 1 of the Class 8 English NCERT textbook (Honeydew), "The Best Christmas Present in the World", is a short story by Michael Morpurgo. The narrator buys a damaged roll-top oak desk, finds a hidden 1914 letter by Captain Jim Macpherson describing the Christmas truce on the Western Front, and delivers it to Jim's wife Connie, now 101.

  • Peace and shared humanity amid warThe heart of the story is the 1914 Christmas truce, where enemy soldiers set aside the war to share food, carols and a football match. It shows that ordinary men on both sides longed for peace more than for victory.
  • A frame narrative built on a hidden letterThe tale is told in two time layers: a present-day narrator restoring an old desk, and the wartime past preserved in a concealed letter. The discovery of the tin box lets one buried voice speak across a century.
  • Enduring love and remembranceConnie's lifelong wait for Jim, and her mistaking the narrator for her husband, turn the letter's return into a reunion. Love and memory outlast war, giving the story its title and emotional close.
  • Friendship across enemy linesJim's bond with German officer Hans Wolf, a cellist who loved Thomas Hardy, dramatises how enemies become individuals once they meet face to face, questioning the very logic of who they are meant to be fighting.
Essentials

Key points & formulas

  1. 01The narrator finds the letter while restoring a roll-top oak desk bought from a junk shop in Bridport; the letter was hidden in a secret drawer inside the last, stuck-fast drawer.
  2. 02The letter is written in pencil, dated 26 December 1914, by Captain Jim Macpherson — a school teacher from Dorset — to his wife Connie, and was received by Connie on 25 January 1915.
  3. 03On Christmas morning 1914, German soldiers (called 'Fritz') waved a white flag and called out 'Happy Christmas, Tommy!' across no man's land, initiating the spontaneous truce.
  4. 04Jim meets Hans Wolf, a German officer from Dusseldorf who plays the cello, speaks almost perfect English, and whose favourite writer is Thomas Hardy and favourite book is Far from the Madding Crowd — though he had never set foot in England.
  5. 05The two sides share schnapps, sausage, and Connie's Christmas cake (Hans Wolf praises the marzipan), then watch and cheer a football match — Fritz wins two goals to one — before returning to their trenches, where they exchange carols (the Germans sing 'Stille Nacht', the British reply with 'While Shepherds Watched').
  6. 06Hans Wolf tells Jim: 'I think this is how we should resolve this war. A football match. No one dies in a football match. No children are orphaned. No wives become widows.'
  7. 07In the present-day frame, the narrator delivers the tin box to Connie Macpherson — now 101, living in Burlington House Nursing Home, Bridport, her original house having burned down — and she mistakes him for Jim, calling him 'the best Christmas present in the world'.
Questions

Frequently asked questions

01

Who wrote 'The Best Christmas Present in the World'?

The story is written by Michael Morpurgo, as stated at the end of the text in the NCERT Honeydew textbook.

02

What does the narrator find in the junk shop in Bridport?

The narrator spots a roll-top desk described as early nineteenth century and made of oak. It is in a bad condition — the roll-top is in several pieces, one leg is clumsily mended, and there are scorch marks down one side.

03

What is inside the secret drawer of the desk?

Inside the secret drawer the narrator finds a small black tin box. Sello-taped to its top is a piece of lined notepaper in shaky handwriting reading: 'Jim's last letter, received January 25, 1915. To be buried with me when the time comes.' Inside the box is an envelope addressed to Mrs Jim Macpherson, 12 Copper Beeches, Bridport, Dorset, containing a letter dated December 26, 1914.

04

Who is Jim Macpherson and what is his profession?

Jim Macpherson is Captain Jim Macpherson, a school teacher from Dorset, in the west of England, who is serving as a soldier during World War I.

05

How did the Christmas truce of 1914 begin in the story?

According to Jim's letter, on Christmas morning someone saw a white flag waving from the German trenches opposite. The Germans then called out 'Happy Christmas, Tommy!' across no man's land. The British shouted back 'Same to you, Fritz!' A German soldier climbed up waving a white flag, others followed, and eventually both sides crossed no man's land unarmed.

06

Who is Hans Wolf and what are his interests?

Hans Wolf is a German officer from Dusseldorf. In civilian life he plays the cello in an orchestra. He speaks almost perfect English, his favourite writer is Thomas Hardy, and his favourite book is Far from the Madding Crowd. He had a wife and a son born just six months earlier. Despite knowing England well from books, he had never actually set foot there.

07

What did the British and German soldiers do together during the Christmas truce?

They crossed no man's land unarmed, shared schnapps, sausage, rum, and Connie's Christmas cake. They talked, smoked, laughed and ate together. Someone brought out a football and the soldiers played a match — Tommy against Fritz — with greatcoats as goalposts. Fritz won two goals to one. That night the Germans sang 'Stille Nacht' (Silent Night) and the British responded with 'While Shepherds Watched', exchanging carols for a while before falling silent.

08

What does Hans Wolf say about resolving the war with a football match?

Hans Wolf tells Jim: 'I think this is how we should resolve this war. A football match. No one dies in a football match. No children are orphaned. No wives become widows.' Jim replies he would prefer cricket, so the Tommies could be sure of winning.

09

Who is Connie Macpherson and what happens when the narrator visits her?

Connie Macpherson is Jim's wife. By the time the narrator visits her she is 101 years old. Her original house at 12 Copper Beeches, Bridport, has burned down, and she is living in Burlington House Nursing Home on the Dorchester road. She is described as a bit muddle-headed. When the narrator opens the tin box and gives it to her, her eyes light up with recognition. She mistakes the narrator for Jim and says: 'You told me you'd come home by Christmas, dearest. And here you are, the best Christmas present in the world.'

10

What does the note on the tin box say, and what does it reveal about Connie?

The note reads: 'Jim's last letter, received January 25, 1915. To be buried with me when the time comes.' The phrase 'last letter' and the instruction to be buried with her suggest that Jim never returned from the war and that Connie kept the letter all her life as her most treasured possession.

11

What does 'no man's land' mean in the story?

No man's land is the open ground between the two opposing armies' trenches. In the story, this is where the British and German soldiers meet during the Christmas truce of 1914, walking toward each other across it unarmed.

12

Is the NCERT Class 8 English Honeydew PDF free to read?

Yes. The NCERT Class 8 English Honeydew textbook PDF is free on CBSE PrepMaster — no sign-up or payment required. You can read or download it instantly from the app.

Keep learning

More chapters in Honeydew

Read Chapter 1 of Honeydew, the Class 8 English NCERT textbook (2026-27 edition), online for free: the complete chapter as published by NCERT with every diagram, solved example and exercise, with a chapter summary, question answers and revision notes. Open the NCERT PDF above, or browse all NCERT Class 8 textbooks.

Read offline with notes, solutions & mock tests

CBSE Prepmaster — free on iOS & Android

Get the App