By the end of this chapter you'll be able to…

  • 1Identify characters in 'The Proposal'
  • 2Analyse one-act play structure
  • 3Understand satire as a device
  • 4Discuss themes of marriage and ego
  • 5Compare with Indian marriage drama
💡
Why this chapter matters
Final First Flight chapter. Russian one-act comedy. Tests drama analysis. Strong for character/satire questions.

Before you start — revise these

A 5-minute refresher here will save you 30 minutes of confusion below.

The Proposal — Class 10 English (First Flight)

"Russian comedy at its finest — a proposal that nearly never happens." — Critic

1. About the Chapter

'The Proposal' is a ONE-ACT COMEDY PLAY by Anton Chekhov, the famous Russian playwright. It satirises marriage among the Russian middle-class through three characters who quarrel over PETTY MATTERS while trying to propose.

Why This Play

  • Comedy classic
  • One-act play format
  • Three characters (manageable)
  • Universal theme (love hindered by ego)
  • Foundation for drama study

2. About the Author

Anton Chekhov (1860–1904)

  • Russian playwright and short-story writer
  • One of greatest dramatists ever
  • Famous plays: 'The Cherry Orchard', 'Three Sisters', 'Uncle Vanya'
  • Known for psychological depth and gentle humour
  • Died at age 44 (tuberculosis)

3. Characters

Ivan Vassilevich Lomov

  • A wealthy farmer (landowner)
  • 35 years old
  • Suffers from PALPITATIONS (heart problems)
  • HYPOCHONDRIAC (worries about health)
  • Wants to marry Natalya — but mostly because she's a 'good housekeeper'

Stepan Stepanovich Chubukov

  • Lomov's neighbour
  • An elderly farmer
  • Initially DELIGHTED by Lomov's proposal
  • Then ANGRY during quarrels
  • Affectionate and explosive

Natalya Stepanovna

  • Chubukov's daughter
  • 25 years old
  • Sharp-tongued, argumentative
  • ANGRY when Lomov mentions land
  • Calm when she learns Lomov came to PROPOSE

4. Setting

  • Chubukov's drawing room
  • Russian countryside
  • Late 19th century

5. Plot Summary

Part 1: Lomov Arrives

Lomov visits Chubukov dressed formally. Chubukov is OVERJOYED — he assumes Lomov wants to borrow money. Lomov nervously asks for Natalya's hand in marriage.

Chubukov is THRILLED and goes to call Natalya.

Part 2: First Quarrel — Oxen Meadows

Lomov tries to propose to Natalya. Before he can ask, he mentions his land: Oxen Meadows.

Natalya is FURIOUS — she claims OXEN MEADOWS belongs to HER family!

They QUARREL:

  • 'It's MY land!'
  • 'No, it's MY land!'

They shout at each other. Chubukov joins in — supports Natalya.

Lomov has HEART PALPITATIONS. He LEAVES in anger.

Part 3: Realisation

Chubukov tells Natalya that Lomov came to PROPOSE MARRIAGE.

Natalya screams: 'Bring him back! Bring him back!'

Part 4: Lomov Returns

Lomov returns. Before he can propose, they start chatting about HUNTING.

Part 5: Second Quarrel — Dogs

Lomov mentions his dog SQUEEZER. Natalya boasts about her dog GUESS.

QUARREL begins:

  • 'Squeezer is BETTER!'
  • 'Guess is BETTER!'

Chubukov joins:

  • 'No, GUESS is better!'

Lomov's PALPITATIONS return. He COLLAPSES (faints).

Part 6: The Marriage

Everyone thinks Lomov is DEAD. Natalya cries. Chubukov calls for water.

Lomov RECOVERS.

Chubukov immediately PLACES NATALYA'S HAND IN LOMOV'S and announces: 'Now KISS each other! You are MARRIED!' (Engaged, technically)

Part 7: Final Quarrel

Even AS the engagement begins, Lomov and Natalya RESUME arguing about the dogs!

The play ends with them STILL QUARRELLING — but ENGAGED.


6. Themes

1. Marriage and Ego

Marriage proposals derailed by SILLY pride.

2. Petty Quarrels

People fight over LAND, DOGS — not love.

3. Practical Marriage

Lomov marries for CONVENIENCE, not love.

4. Russian Society

  • Land ownership central to wealth
  • Marriages arranged among neighbours
  • Hypochondria common

5. Comedy of Manners

Manners get in way of real connection.

6. Human Nature

We argue while we love. Comedy in tragedy.


7. Themes — Modern Interpretation

What's Funny?

The characters CARE more about land and dogs than about LOVE. This INVERTS our expectations and creates COMEDY.

What's Real?

Many real marriages today still face petty quarrels. Chekhov saw this 130+ years ago.


8. Important Quotes

"I look upon you, honoured Stepan Stepanovich, as my own father."

"Excuse me, I will make it clear to you at once. Honoured Stepan Stepanovich, you know how long I have loved your daughter..."

"Oxen Meadows are MY property, do you hear, MINE!"

"Squeezer is better than Guess!"

"He's dead! He's dead!"

"Kiss her, will you, and be done with it!"


9. Literary Devices

Comedy

  • Situational comedy (proposal interrupted)
  • Verbal comedy (arguments)
  • Physical comedy (Lomov faints)

Irony

  • Lomov comes to propose, fights over land
  • Engaged while still arguing

Repetition

  • 'It's MY land', 'It's MY dog'
  • Pattern of quarrels

Hyperbole

  • 'I'm dying!' 'Bring water!'
  • Exaggerated emotions

Setting

  • Drawing room (intimate)
  • Russian countryside (specific)

10. Common Mistakes

  1. It's a novel — NO. It's a ONE-ACT PLAY.

  2. Lomov dies — NO. He FAINTS, then RECOVERS.

  3. Natalya rejects Lomov — NO. She accepts (after recovering from quarrel).

  4. Set in India — NO. Set in RUSSIA.

  5. They marry for love — NO. Marriage is for CONVENIENCE.


11. Lessons / Morals

  1. Don't sweat petty matters — they ruin big moments
  2. Marriage needs more than convenience
  3. Pride is the enemy of happiness
  4. Comedy can show truth better than tragedy
  5. Human nature is universal — Russians 1880s = us today

12. Worked Examples

Example 1: Character

Describe Lomov.

  • Lomov is a 35-year-old WEALTHY FARMER, hypochondriac, suffering palpitations. He's NERVOUS, easily AGITATED, and visits Chubukov to PROPOSE to Natalya. Though he wants marriage for convenience, he gets distracted by quarrels over land and dogs.

Example 2: Plot

Why does the proposal keep getting delayed?

  • Lomov has palpitations and gets distracted. Before he can propose, he mentions his OXEN MEADOWS. Natalya claims it's HER family's land. Big QUARREL. Lomov leaves. Returns, gets into another quarrel about DOGS (Squeezer vs. Guess). He FAINTS. Only THEN, Chubukov hurriedly engages them.

Example 3: Theme

What does Chekhov satirise in 'The Proposal'?

  • Chekhov satirises:
    • MIDDLE-CLASS marriages based on PROPERTY, not love
    • PETTY EGO that ruins big moments
    • HYPOCHONDRIA and exaggerated emotions
    • MARRIAGE as commercial arrangement
  • He shows how SMALL THINGS can derail BIG OCCASIONS.

13. Indian Context

Drama in India

  • Sanskrit drama: Kalidasa's 'Shakuntala'
  • Modern Indian theatre: Habib Tanvir, Girish Karnad
  • Folk drama: Tamasha, Yakshagana, Jatra

Indian Marriage Comedy

  • 'Hum Aapke Hain Koun'
  • 'Kabhi Khushi Kabhie Gham'
  • Indian families also negotiate marriages

Why Chekhov Relates

  • Indian families also have PROPERTY disputes
  • Marriages still partly transactional
  • Pride and ego derail relationships everywhere

14. Conclusion

'The Proposal' is a CLASSIC COMEDY that:

  • ENTERTAINS through petty quarrels
  • TEACHES that ego ruins love
  • SHOWS marriage as social drama
  • TRANSCENDS culture (universal themes)

For Indian students:

  • LEARN one-act play structure
  • ENJOY classic Russian literature
  • REFLECT on marriage and relationships
  • WRITE skits inspired by Chekhov

'The Proposal' — laughs at the absurdity of love, marriage, and human ego.

Key formulas & results

Everything you need to memorise, in one card. Screenshot this for revision.

Author
Anton Chekhov (Russian, 1860-1904)
Genre
One-act comedy (farce)
Setting
Chubukov's drawing room, Russia
Characters
Lomov, Chubukov, Natalya
Only 3
Quarrel 1
Oxen Meadows (land)
Quarrel 2
Squeezer vs. Guess (dogs)
⚠️

Common mistakes & fixes

These are the exact errors that cost students marks in board exams. Read them once, save yourself the trouble.

WATCH OUT
It's a novel
It's a ONE-ACT PLAY.
WATCH OUT
Lomov dies
He FAINTS; recovers and gets engaged.
WATCH OUT
Set in India
Set in RUSSIA, 19th century.

NCERT exercises (with solutions)

Every NCERT exercise from this chapter — what it covers and how many questions to expect.

Practice problems

Try each one yourself before tapping "Show solution". Active recall > rereading.

Q1EASY· Plot
Why does Lomov visit Chubukov?
Show solution
✦ Answer: He visits to propose marriage to Chubukov's daughter Natalya. He wants a 'good housekeeper' wife and chose Natalya as a sensible match.
Q2MEDIUM· Theme
What is the quarrel over Oxen Meadows about?
Show solution
Step 1 — Lomov's claim. Before proposing, Lomov mentions his OXEN MEADOWS — land he claims as his. Step 2 — Natalya's claim. Natalya immediately insists Oxen Meadows belongs to HER family. Step 3 — The fight. Both shout: 'It's MY land!' They quote ancestors, give histories. Chubukov joins, supporting Natalya. Step 4 — Outcome. Lomov leaves angry, with heart palpitations. The proposal is forgotten. Step 5 — Resolution. Chubukov realises Lomov came to propose. He calls him back. They never resolve the land issue — but get engaged anyway. ✦ Answer: Lomov claims Oxen Meadows is his land; Natalya claims it belongs to her family. They fight bitterly, quoting ancestors. Lomov leaves angry. When Chubukov reveals Lomov came to propose, Natalya calls him back. The land dispute is never resolved — engagement happens anyway, showing how PETTY pride nearly destroys a proposal.
Q3HARD· Analysis
How does Chekhov use comedy to critique 19th-century Russian middle-class marriage?
Show solution
Step 1 — The satirical premise. Three educated, wealthy people meet to discuss MARRIAGE. Instead, they fight about LAND and DOGS. Step 2 — Marriage as transaction. Lomov wants Natalya not for LOVE, but because: • She's 26 (good marriageable age) • She's a 'good housekeeper' • Neighbouring families Chekhov shows: marriage = economic merger. Step 3 — Property obsession. All three obsess over LAND and DOGS. These matter more than feelings. Chekhov mocks materialist values. Step 4 — Ego and pride. Even when a marriage is at stake, they REFUSE to back down on tiny claims. Ego > love. Step 5 — Hypochondria. Lomov's exaggerated illness mocks middle-class anxiety. Health complaints replace genuine emotion. Step 6 — Comedy structure. • Repetitive quarrels (predictable rhythm) • Physical comedy (fainting) • Reconciliation that resolves nothing • Engagement amid ongoing argument Step 7 — Universal message. Russian setting, but the message UNIVERSAL: pride, greed, and petty pride exist everywhere. Modern Indian audiences laugh because we recognise the behaviour. Step 8 — Chekhov's craft. Through laughter, he criticises. The audience LAUGHS at characters BUT ALSO at themselves. This is the genius of satirical comedy. ✦ Answer: Chekhov uses one-act comedy to expose middle-class marriage as economic merger, not love. Lomov wants Natalya as a 'good housekeeper'. The characters care more about land (Oxen Meadows) and dogs (Squeezer vs. Guess) than romance. Ego ruins the proposal repeatedly. Hypochondria (Lomov's palpitations) mocks middle-class anxiety. The repetitive quarrels and final engagement-while-arguing show: marriage is built on shaky ground when based on convenience and pride. Through laughter, Chekhov critiques materialism, ego, and superficial relationships — a message universal across cultures and time.

5-minute revision

The whole chapter, distilled. Read this the night before the exam.

  • Author: Anton Chekhov (Russian, 1860-1904)
  • Genre: one-act comedy (farce)
  • Characters: Lomov (proposer), Chubukov (father), Natalya (bride)
  • Setting: Russian country drawing room
  • Lomov: 35, hypochondriac, palpitations
  • Quarrel 1: Oxen Meadows (land)
  • Quarrel 2: Squeezer vs. Guess (dogs)
  • Lomov faints; engaged on recovery
  • Engagement happens AMID ongoing quarrel
  • Themes: marriage, ego, materialism, satire

CBSE marks blueprint

Where the marks come from in this chapter — so you can plan your prep.

Typical chapter weightage: 8-10 marks

Question typeMarks eachTypical countWhat it tests
Short2-32Characters, plot
Long61Satire/character essay
Prep strategy
  • Memorise character names
  • Note the two quarrels
  • Understand satire
  • Practice play-script analysis

Where this shows up in the real world

This chapter isn't just an exam topic — it lives in the world around you.

Indian arranged marriages

Similar concerns about family, property, compatibility — Chekhov's themes resonate today.

Bollywood family comedies

'Hum Aapke Hain Koun', 'Kabhi Khushi Kabhie Gham' explore marriage with comedy.

Indian theatre tradition

Habib Tanvir, Girish Karnad continue Chekhov-style social drama in India.

Exam strategy

Battle-tested tips from teachers and toppers for this chapter.

  1. Always name all three characters
  2. Use the two quarrels as evidence
  3. Quote 'It's MY land!' / 'MY dog!'
  4. Highlight comedy + satire link

Going beyond the textbook

For olympiad aspirants and curious learners — topics that build on this chapter.

  • Read 'The Cherry Orchard'
  • Watch a stage version
  • Compare with Shakespeare's comedies
  • Study Indian Sanskrit drama (Kalidasa)

Where else this chapter is tested

CBSE board isn't the only one — other exams test this chapter too.

CBSE Class 10 BoardVery High
Drama OlympiadHigh

Questions students ask

The real ones — pulled from the Q&A community and tutor sessions.

Lomov genuinely has heart palpitations triggered by stress and excitement. But he is also a HYPOCHONDRIAC — exaggerating symptoms. Chekhov uses this to mock middle-class anxiety and add physical comedy. The illness gives an excuse for fainting at the climactic moment.
Verified by the tuition.in editorial team
Last reviewed on 20 May 2026. Written and reviewed by subject-matter experts — read about our process.
Editorial process →
Header Logo