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's on a Noun

So I was wondering if this sentence was grammatically correct, it's pulled from a children's book. I thought the 's made it possessive and does not work as a contraction of is.

The leopard is proud
Of her spotted coat.
The nightingale
Of his song.
The elephant's glad ****
She has a trunk.
The lion's glad ***
He's strong.

They all agree.
"I'm glad I'm me.
No one's more fun ***
Or nicer to be"

Re: 's on a Noun

Compare these:

the boy's bike : here, the noun 'boy' is shown in the possessive - boy's. The boy owns the bike.
the boy's brand new bike
Note that the form is noun's +(adjective/s) + noun

and

1. the boy's unhappy = the boy is unhappy
2. the boy's going to be late = the boy is going to be late

Note that 'boy's' is not followed by a noun in either sentence.
In (1), it is followed by an adjective - but no noun
in (2), there is no noun after 'boy's', and you can see that 'boy's' is a contraction of the verb form 'is going'

Let me change a few lines in the poem:

The leopard is proud……...The leopard's proud
Of her spotted coat.
The nightingale
Of his song.
The elephant's glad……..The elephant is glad
She has a trunk.
The lion's glad………...The lion is glad
He's strong……...He is strong.

So, yes. The grammar is correct.