The Thief's Story — Ruskin Bond
"I had forgotten about my education in the excitement of the theft."
1. About the Story
'The Thief's Story' is Chapter 2 of Footprints Without Feet, written by India's beloved Ruskin Bond. It is a first-person narrative by a 15-year-old thief, Hari Singh, who meets Anil — a trusting, kind man — and finds himself CHANGED by Anil's trust.
Why This Story
- By RUSKIN BOND — India's most-loved English writer
- Narrated by a TEENAGE THIEF — unique perspective
- Theme: TRUST and KINDNESS can transform people
- Short, gripping, with a powerful ending
- Easy vocabulary, deep meaning
2. About the Author
Ruskin Bond (born 1934)
(See also 'The Cherry Tree' in Class 8)
- Born in Kasauli, Himachal Pradesh
- Lives in Landour, Mussoorie (60+ years)
- Padma Shri (1999), Padma Bhushan (2014)
- Wrote 500+ books — stories, novels, poems, essays
- Known for: gentle, warm writing about ordinary people
- 'The Thief's Story' showcases his gift for capturing human transformation
3. Characters
Hari Singh (The Narrator)
- 15-year-old thief
- Experienced pickpocket and petty criminal
- Changes his NAME frequently to avoid police
- Initially: sees people as 'marks', targets
- INTELLIGENT: knows he needs education to be more than a thief
- DEEP DOWN: capable of change — Anil's trust unlocks this
Anil
- Young man, about 25 years old
- Kind, trusting, easy-going
- Lives simply — earns from writing for magazines
- Takes Hari in despite knowing little about him
- TEACHES Hari to read and write
- NEVER suspects Hari — or does he?
- The quiet hero of the story
4. Plot Summary
The Meeting
- Hari Singh (15) meets Anil (25) at a wrestling match
- Hari introduces himself with a FALSE NAME (as always)
- Hari sizes him up: Anil looks 'simple, easy-going, kind'
- Hari asks for WORK — he has other plans (robbing Anil)
- Anil says he can't pay but can feed him
- Hari agrees: food is enough (for now)
Life with Anil
- Anil lives simply — a room, a bed, a kerosene stove
- He cooks for Hari; teaches Hari to cook
- Anil writes for magazines — irregular income
- When Anil earns money, they celebrate
- Anil TEACHES HARI TO READ AND WRITE
- Hari: 'I had never known anyone so trusting'
The Temptation
- One day, Anil brings home a BUNDLE OF 600 RUPEES
- He tucks it under the mattress
- Hari SEES it. The thief in him AWAKENS.
- He waits for Anil to fall asleep
- At night, Hari takes the money and sneaks out
The Train Station
- Hari reaches the railway station with the 600 rupees
- He could buy a ticket to Lucknow — escape forever
- BUT: he HESITATES
- He thinks about:
- Anil's trusting face
- The reading and writing lessons
- 'Anil had given me the key to a new life'
- The 600 rupees would be spent in a few weeks — then what?
- Education, however, would EARN for a lifetime
The Return
- Hari CANNOT board the train
- He goes BACK to Anil's room
- He puts the money BACK under the mattress
- The notes are WET from the rain
The Morning
- Hari wakes up late
- Anil has already made tea
- Anil hands Hari a 50-rupee note
- He says: 'I made some money yesterday. Now I'll pay you regularly.'
- He says: 'You're a good boy, Hari.'
- Anil KNOWS — the wet notes told him everything
- But Anil says NOTHING about the theft
- Instead, he OFFERS regular payment and calls Hari 'good'
- This TRUST breaks through completely
5. The Ending — What Really Happened?
Did Anil Know?
- The wet notes under the mattress: YES, Anil knew.
- Anil gave Hari 50 rupees — a REWARD for returning?
- 'I made some money yesterday' — YESTERDAY is when Hari stole and returned the money
- Anil's gentle statement is full of meaning
Why Didn't Anil Confront Hari?
- Confrontation = accusation, shame, defence
- By SAYING NOTHING, Anil:
- Saved Hari's dignity
- Showed trust even after betrayal
- Gave Hari a chance to CHOOSE goodness
- Transformed Hari without a single angry word
The Power of 'You're a Good Boy'
- Anil CALLS Hari 'good' — not 'thief', not 'dishonest'
- This naming gives Hari a NEW IDENTITY
- Hari can now SEE HIMSELF as good
- The label becomes a gift — and a responsibility
6. Hari Singh's Transformation
Before Anil
- Sees people as TARGETS
- Changes name, place, identity constantly
- Survival mode: steal and run
- Education is irrelevant
During Life with Anil
- Learns to READ and WRITE
- Experiences TRUST for the first time
- Enjoys simple companionship
- Begins to see another possible life
At the Station (The Crisis)
- Torn between OLD SELF (thief) and NEW SELF (student)
- Realises: education > money
- 'I had forgotten my education in the excitement of the theft'
- CHOOSES to return
After Returning
- No praise, no punishment — just Anil's QUIET TRUST
- 'You're a good boy' — the label that sticks
- Hari has CHANGED — permanently, we believe
7. Themes
1. The Transformative Power of Trust
Anil trusts Hari, and that trust CHANGES Hari. If Anil had been suspicious, Hari would have remained a thief.
2. Education as Liberation
'Had Anil given me the key to a new life' — education, not money, is the escape from a life of crime.
3. Human Goodness
Hari is NOT inherently bad. He is a product of CIRCUMSTANCES. Given trust and opportunity, his goodness emerges.
4. Kindness Over Confrontation
Anil's SILENCE and CONTINUED TRUST are more powerful than any accusation could be.
5. Choice and Redemption
Hari CHOOSES to return. He could have escaped. His redemption comes from his own decision — catalysed by Anil's trust.
6. Identity and Labels
Call a boy 'thief' — he'll be a thief. Call him 'good' — he learns to be good.
8. Literary Devices
First-Person Narration
- Hari tells his OWN story
- We are INSIDE his mind — we feel his conflict
- Makes his transformation INTIMATE and BELIEVABLE
Internal Conflict
- Hari at the station: thief-self vs student-self
- The ENTIRE story turns on this INNER BATTLE
Foreshadowing
- 'I had been working for Anil for almost a month, and apart from cheating on the shopping, had not done anything criminal' — hints the old Hari is still there
Symbolism
- The wet notes = evidence of the theft and return. Anil KNOWS but chooses not to speak.
- Reading/writing = education as the 'key to a new life'
- The train station = the CROSSROADS — the place of choice
Irony
- The 'thief' ends up being the one whose story is about NOT stealing
- The 'simple, trusting' Anil is actually WISE — he knew all along
Contrast
- Hari's OLD LIFE (stealing, running, fake names) vs NEW LIFE (education, trust, stability)
- Money (600 rupees, spent quickly) vs Education (earns for a lifetime)
Tone
- Reflective, honest, slightly confessional
- Hari is LOOKING BACK on his transformation
- No self-pity — just truthful narration
9. The Title — 'The Thief's Story'
- Told BY the thief — not ABOUT the thief
- Gives the 'criminal' a voice
- Suggests this is HIS version — he claims his own redemption
- 'Story' = not just events, but MEANING. Hari's story has a POINT.
10. Common Mistakes
-
Anil is naive / stupid — NO. Anil is WISE. He knows Hari stole but chooses trust over accusation. His method WORKS.
-
Hari changed instantly because of Anil — Partially. Anil created the CONDITIONS for change. Hari made the CHOICE. Both are necessary.
-
The wet notes are just a detail — They are the KEY to the ending. They tell Anil everything — and Anil's silence tells Hari everything.
-
Anil's 'I made some money yesterday' is literal — He likely had no new income. He's offering Hari a MORAL WAY to earn money — so he doesn't need to steal.
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Hari is a bad person — He is a 15-year-old PRODUCT OF CIRCUMSTANCES who chooses to CHANGE. The story is about his goodness, not his badness.
11. Lessons / Morals
- Trust can transform — suspicion breeds more crime; trust breeds goodness
- Education is real wealth — money disappears; learning stays
- Second chances matter — everyone deserves the opportunity to change
- How you see people affects who they become — call them good, they learn goodness
- Quiet kindness can be more powerful than loud accusations
- We all have the capacity to change — Hari is proof
12. Worked Examples
Example 1: Character
Describe Hari Singh's character and his transformation.
- Hari Singh is a 15-year-old THIEF — experienced, clever, always changing names. He sees people as targets. But he is also INTELLIGENT: he knows education is needed to rise above petty crime. When he meets Anil and experiences TRUST for the first time, Hari begins to change. At the crucial moment (the station with 600 rupees), his BETTER SELF wins — he realises that education (Anil's gift) is worth more than stolen money. He returns. The final transformation comes from Anil's SILENT FORGIVENESS and the words 'You're a good boy'. Hari emerges as someone capable of goodness.
Example 2: Theme
How does trust transform people? Answer with reference to 'The Thief's Story'.
- Anil trusts Hari COMPLETELY. He takes in a stranger, teaches him to read and write, leaves money where Hari can see it — never showing suspicion. This trust creates a BOND. When Hari steals the 600 rupees, it is Anil's TRUST that pulls him back — 'Anil had given me the key to a new life.' The return is Hari's choice. But the FINAL transformation happens when Anil, KNOWING about the theft (wet notes), says nothing — and instead calls Hari 'a good boy'. This unshakeable trust, even after betrayal, transforms Hari permanently. The story argues that TRUST, not suspicion, brings out human goodness.
Example 3: The Ending
What is the significance of Anil's words at the end: 'You're a good boy, Hari'?
- Anil says this AFTER discovering the theft (the wet notes). He DOES NOT accuse, shame, or punish. Instead, he AFFIRMS Hari's goodness — calling him what he CAN BE, not what he WAS. This is a profound act: (1) It gives Hari a NEW IDENTITY — 'good boy', not 'thief'. (2) It shows Anil's WISDOM — he knows accusation would push Hari away; trust would keep him. (3) It COMPLETES Hari's transformation — being SEEN as good, Hari can now BE good. The line is the story's QUIET CLIMAX — everything has led to this moment of grace.
13. Indian Context
Ruskin Bond's India
- The story is set in small-town INDIA — a wrestling match, a simple room, a kerosene stove
- Anil writes for magazines — a modest Indian intellectual life
- The 600 rupees: a realistic sum in the Indian economy
- The train station: Lucknow Express — specific Indian geography
Child Thieves in India
- Many children in India are forced into petty crime by poverty
- The story HUMANISES them — Hari is not a 'criminal', he's a child
- Education is the recognised path out of poverty in India
Indian Values
- Trust (Vishwas): Deeply valued in Indian culture
- Guru-Shishya tradition: Anil teaches Hari — the teacher-student bond
- Redemption: Indian spiritual traditions believe in transformation, not permanent damnation
14. Conclusion
'The Thief's Story' is a QUIET MASTERPIECE by India's own Ruskin Bond:
- HARI SINGH: the 15-year-old thief who learns he can be MORE
- ANIL: the trusting man whose kindness transforms a criminal
- THE CRISIS: 600 rupees at a train station — will Hari escape or return?
- THE RETURN: Hari CHOOSES education and trust over money
- THE ENDING: 'You're a good boy, Hari' — the words that complete the transformation
For Indian students:
- This is RUSKIN BOND — know him, love him, quote him
- The transformation arc is the key to every long answer
- The wet notes and the ending — guaranteed exam material
- 'Education is the key to a new life' — a message for YOUR life too
'The Thief's Story' — the greatest theft is of a person's potential. Anil stole that back for Hari.
