The Author's Life
The Prince's Journey
Key Symbols
Who Said It?
Big Ideas
200

The country where Atoine de Saint-Exupery was born.

What is France?

200

The first thing the pilot gives to the prince.

What is the drawing of the elephant in the boa constrictor?

200

The drawing that finally makes the Prince happy, symbolizing that what is "essential" is often "invisible" or imagined.

What is the sheep in a box?

200

The character who said: "Please... draw me a sheep!"

Who is the Little Prince?

200

The fox's special word for creating a unique bond with someone by spending time with them.

What is "to tame"?

400

The author's real life job. Also the job of the narrator.

What is a pilot?

400

They make the Little Prince think his own Rose isn't unique after he meets them.

Who are the 5,000 roses?

400

These destructive plants symbolize bad habits or evil ideas (like Nazism) that must be pulled up when they are small.

What are the baobabs?

400

The character who said: "I have a right to demand obedience because my orders are reasonable."

Who is the King?

400

The King giving orders but not having any power is a satire of this.

What is the appearance of/desire for authority?

600

The place where Antoine de Saint-Exupery wrote The Little Prince after running away from his own country.

What is the USA?

600

This character's job is absurd because his planet now spins once per minute.

Who is the lamplighter?

600

This drawing symbolizes the imagination of children vs. the literal-minded adult world.

What is the boa constrictor eating an elephant?

600

The character who said: "I drink so that I may forget... Forget what?... Forget that I am ashamed... Ashamed of what?... Ashamed of drinking!"

Who is the Tippler?

600

The fox says this makes the Prince's rose unique.

What is the time and care he has "wasted" on her (or his relationship/responsibility for her)?

800

The place where Antoine de Saint-Exupéry crashed in 1935, inspiring the story.

What is the Sahara Desert?

800

This character is a satire of "grown-ups" who are obsessed with counting and "owning" the stars.

Who is the businessman?

800

For the pilot, these are a beautifu reminder of the Prince's laughter, symbolizing how memory and relationships change one's reality.

What are the stars?

800

The character who said: "One only understands the things that one tames... What is essential is invisible to the eye."

Who is the Fox?

800

The snake's final "gift" to the Prince, which looks like death.

What is returning home (or letting go of the physical "shell" to keep what is essential)?

1000

The person who is widely believed to be the inspiration for the rose.

Who is Consuelo de Saint-Exupery (the author's wife)?

1000

This character is the first one the Prince meets on Earth, speaks in riddles and claims to be more powerful than a king.

Who is the snake?

1000

This literary technique is used to criticise humans and society in a funny way. The King, the Vain Man, and the Geographer are all examples of this literary technique.

What is satire?

1000

The character who said: "It is a little lonely in the desert... It is also lonely among men."

Who is the Snake?

1000

The "grown-up" obsession with numbers, power, and money, which the narrator calles "matters...".

What are "matters of consequence"?

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