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

  • 1Explain why Bholi was neglected and considered 'backward'
  • 2Describe how the school and the teacher transformed her
  • 3Narrate the wedding, the dowry demand and Bholi's refusal
  • 4Explain Bholi's decision about her future
  • 5Discuss the themes of girl-child education, self-respect and dowry
💡
Why this chapter matters
A powerful social story that the RBSE board strongly favours for value-based and long-answer questions on girl-child education, self-respect and dowry. Its clear message and emotional arc make it a top scorer.

Bholi — RBSE Class 10 English (Footprints without Feet)

A little girl who cannot speak without stammering, whose face is scarred by smallpox, is written off by her own family as a "simpleton" — Bholi, the fool. This is the story of how education and one kind teacher wake that girl up, until the day she stands taller than everyone at her own wedding and refuses to be sold. It is a stirring lesson in the power of educating the girl child.


1. Bholi — the neglected child

Sulekha was the youngest daughter of Numberdar Ramlal, a well-off farmer. As a baby she fell off a cot, possibly damaging her brain; then an attack of smallpox left her face deeply pockmarked. She was slow to learn and stammered when she spoke. So the family and village nicknamed her "Bholi" (the simpleton) and treated her as a backward, worthless girl — neglected, poorly dressed, and given no love. Her better-looking, "normal" sisters got all the attention.


2. Sent to school

When a primary school for girls opened in the village, the tehsildar urged Ramlal, as an official, to set an example by sending a daughter. Ramlal, having no use for Bholi at home and unlikely to marry her off easily, decided to send Bholi to school. Bholi was terrified — but a kind, gentle teacher changed everything.

The teacher spoke to her lovingly, gave her a book with colourful pictures, and gently encouraged her, promising that with practice she could read, write, and even speak without stammering. For the first time, Bholi felt valued and hopeful. Over the years, quietly and steadily, education gave her knowledge and confidence.


3. The wedding — and the turning point

Years later, a marriage was arranged for Bholi with Bishamber Nath, a fairly rich, well-off man — but he was middle-aged, lame, and had grown-up children from a previous marriage. The family was only too relieved to marry off the "ugly" Bholi and readily agreed.

At the wedding, as the ceremony proceeded, the greedy groom Bishamber demanded a dowry of five thousand rupees or he would not marry her — insulting the family. The humiliated Ramlal, to save face, was ready to beg and pay, placing the money at the groom's feet.

Then Bholi did the unthinkable: she threw away the garland, refused to marry such a mean, greedy man, and declared she would not marry him at any price. The educated Bholi found her voice and self-respect — she would rather remain unmarried than be sold to a heartless man. Bishamber and his party left in disgrace.


4. Bholi's new purpose

Ramlal feared his daughter would now never marry and be a burden. But Bholi calmly reassured her weeping father: she would look after her parents in their old age and teach at the very school that had transformed her. The neglected "simpleton" had become the family's most capable, self-respecting and useful member.

The teacher, watching from among the crowd, felt proud — her work had borne fruit.


5. Themes

  • The importance of educating the girl child — education transforms Bholi from a neglected "simpleton" into a confident, self-respecting woman.
  • Self-respect and courage — Bholi's refusal to marry a greedy man shows the dignity education gives.
  • The evil of dowry — the story exposes the cruelty and greed of the dowry system.
  • The power of a caring teacher — kindness and encouragement can unlock a child's hidden potential.

6. Closing thought

"Bholi" is a quietly revolutionary story. It takes a child everyone has given up on — scarred, stammering, unloved — and shows that what she lacked was never intelligence but opportunity and encouragement. Education does not just teach Bholi to read; it gives her a voice, a will and a sense of worth strong enough to reject a man who tries to buy her. The girl once called a fool becomes the wisest, bravest person in the room. The message is unmistakable: educate the girl child, and you free her.

For the RBSE board, remember why Bholi was neglected, the role of the school and the loving teacher, the dowry demand and Bholi's brave refusal, and the themes of girl-child education, self-respect and dowry. Value-based questions on education and women's empowerment are common.

Key formulas & results

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

Author
K.A. Abbas (a social story)
On girl-child education.
Bholi
Sulekha, called 'Bholi' (simpleton); pockmarked, stammers
Neglected youngest daughter of Ramlal.
The teacher
A kind teacher who encourages her with love and a picture book
Unlocks her confidence.
The groom
Bishamber Nath — well-off but middle-aged, lame, with grown children
Demands dowry.
The dowry
Bishamber demands ₹5,000 dowry at the wedding
Ramlal ready to pay to save face.
The turning point
Bholi refuses to marry the greedy man; chooses self-respect
Decides to teach and serve her parents.
⚠️

Common mistakes & fixes

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

WATCH OUT
Saying Bholi was actually unintelligent
Bholi was NOT stupid — she was neglected and lacked encouragement. Education revealed she was intelligent, brave and capable; her stammer and scars were not her true self.
WATCH OUT
Getting the groom's demand wrong
At the wedding, Bishamber Nath demanded a dowry of five thousand rupees, threatening not to marry Bholi otherwise.
WATCH OUT
Saying Bholi married Bishamber
Bholi REFUSED to marry the greedy Bishamber, throwing away the garland — a decisive act of self-respect.
WATCH OUT
Missing the teacher's role
The kind teacher's love and encouragement were the turning point that transformed the neglected girl into a confident woman.
WATCH OUT
Overlooking Bholi's future plan
Bholi reassured her father that she would care for her parents in old age and teach at the school that had changed her.

Practice problems

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

Q1EASY· Fact-recall
What was Bholi's real name, and why was she called 'Bholi'?
Show solution
✦ Answer: her real name was Sulekha; she was called 'Bholi' (simpleton) because she was thought backward, was pockmarked and stammered.
Q2EASY· Fact-recall
How much dowry did Bishamber Nath demand at the wedding?
Show solution
✦ Answer: five thousand rupees (₹5,000).
Q3EASY· Comprehension
Why was Bholi sent to school?
Show solution
Because a girls' school opened and the tehsildar urged Ramlal to set an example; Ramlal had no other use for the neglected Bholi and thought she was unlikely to marry. ✦ Answer: to set an example when a girls' school opened, as the family saw no other use for her.
Q4MEDIUM· Neglect
Why was Bholi neglected by her family?
Show solution
Step 1 — As a baby she fell and possibly damaged her brain, and smallpox left her face pockmarked; she was slow and stammered. Step 2 — So the family considered her backward and worthless, gave her no love or good clothes, and favoured her prettier sisters. ✦ Answer: because she was considered a slow, ugly 'simpleton', she was neglected in favour of her sisters.
Q5MEDIUM· Teacher
How did the teacher help transform Bholi?
Show solution
Step 1 — The teacher spoke to Bholi with love and gentleness, unlike anyone at home. Step 2 — She gave her a colourful picture book and encouraged her, promising she could learn to read, write and even overcome her stammer — giving Bholi hope and confidence. ✦ Answer: through loving encouragement and education, the teacher gave Bholi knowledge, hope and self-confidence.
Q6MEDIUM· Refusal
Why did Bholi refuse to marry Bishamber Nath?
Show solution
Step 1 — At the wedding, Bishamber greedily demanded a five-thousand-rupee dowry and insulted her family. Step 2 — The educated, self-respecting Bholi refused to marry such a mean, greedy man at any price, throwing away the garland. ✦ Answer: because he was greedy and demanded a dowry, and she now had the self-respect to refuse such a man.
Q7HARD· Transformation
How does education transform Bholi's life and character?
Show solution
Step 1 — At first Bholi is a neglected, fearful girl who stammers and is thought worthless. Step 2 — The school and the loving teacher give her knowledge, encouragement and, above all, confidence and self-respect. Step 3 — This transformed Bholi finds the courage to reject a greedy groom at her own wedding, standing up for her dignity. Step 4 — She resolves to serve her parents and teach at her school — becoming the family's most capable, self-respecting member. ✦ Answer: education turns a neglected 'simpleton' into a confident, courageous, self-respecting woman who defends her dignity and chooses a purposeful life.
Q8HARD· Value-based
What social messages does the story 'Bholi' convey?
Show solution
Step 1 — Educate the girl child — education can transform even a neglected girl into a capable, confident woman. Step 2 — Every child deserves love and encouragement, not neglect based on looks or disability. Step 3 — The dowry system is an evil that reduces marriage to a greedy bargain and must be rejected. Step 4 — Self-respect and courage matter more than social pressure to marry. ✦ Answer: the value of girl-child education, love for every child, rejection of dowry, and the importance of self-respect.

5-minute revision

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

  • Author: K.A. Abbas; a social story on girl-child education.
  • Bholi (Sulekha), youngest daughter of Ramlal; pockmarked, stammering, thought a 'simpleton', neglected.
  • A girls' school opens; Ramlal sends Bholi to set an example.
  • A loving teacher gives her a picture book and encouragement, unlocking her confidence.
  • A marriage is arranged with Bishamber Nath — rich but middle-aged, lame, with grown children.
  • At the wedding Bishamber demands a ₹5,000 dowry; Ramlal is ready to pay to save face.
  • Bholi throws away the garland and refuses to marry such a greedy man — asserting self-respect.
  • She resolves to care for her parents and teach at her school. Themes: girl-child education, self-respect, dowry evil, a caring teacher.

Rajasthan (RBSE) marks blueprint

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

Typical chapter weightage: 5–7 marks

Question typeMarks eachTypical countWhat it tests
MCQ / extract-based11–2Bholi's name, the dowry, the groom
Short answer2–31–2Her neglect; the teacher; the refusal
Long answer4–51Education's transformation; social messages / value-based
Prep strategy
  • Fix the arc: neglect → school/teacher → transformation → wedding/dowry → refusal → new purpose
  • Remember the dowry sum (₹5,000) and the groom (Bishamber Nath)
  • Prepare the education-transformation long answer
  • Prepare a value-based answer on girl-child education and dowry

Where this shows up in the real world

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

Girl-child education

A powerful case for schemes like Beti Bachao, Beti Padhao — education empowers girls.

Fighting dowry

It exposes the dowry evil and supports laws and campaigns against it.

Inclusive teaching

The teacher's kindness models how encouragement unlocks 'weak' students.

Women's empowerment

Bholi's self-respect is an inspiring example for gender-equality discussions.

Value education

A staple text for moral and social values in the classroom.

Confidence building

It shows how self-belief can be nurtured in any child.

Exam strategy

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

  1. Trace Bholi's transformation from neglect to confidence for long answers.
  2. Emphasise the teacher's role and the school as the turning point.
  3. State the dowry demand and Bholi's brave refusal precisely.
  4. In value-based answers, name girl-child education, dowry and self-respect.
  5. For extract questions, identify the stage (neglect, school, wedding).
  6. Note Bholi's plan to teach and care for her parents.

Going beyond the textbook

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

  • The status of girls' education in India — history and current schemes.
  • The social and legal fight against the dowry system.
  • Social-reform fiction as a genre.
  • How disability and appearance shape social attitudes, and how to change them.

Where else this chapter is tested

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

RBSE Class 10 Board (BSER Ajmer)High — value-based and long-answer questions most years
NTSE / state scholarshipLow–Medium — comprehension
CBSE/other board EnglishHigh — same prescribed text
Social-awareness essaysMedium — girl education and dowry topics

Questions students ask

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

Yes. RBSE prescribes the NCERT reader 'Footprints without Feet' for Class 10 English, so this K.A. Abbas story is the same. RBSE (BSER Ajmer) sets the exam pattern and marking.

As a baby she fell and possibly hurt her brain, and smallpox left her face deeply pockmarked; she was slow to learn and stammered. So her family and village dismissed her as a backward 'simpleton' and neglected her in favour of her prettier, 'normal' sisters.

A loving teacher gave Bholi encouragement, a picture book and confidence for the first time in her life. Over the years, education gave her knowledge and self-respect, transforming the fearful, neglected girl into a confident, courageous woman.

At the wedding, Bishamber greedily demanded a dowry of five thousand rupees and insulted her family. The now-educated and self-respecting Bholi refused to marry such a mean, greedy man at any price, throwing away the garland.

That educating the girl child can transform her life; that every child deserves love and encouragement; that the dowry system is a cruel evil to be rejected; and that self-respect and courage matter more than bowing to social pressure.
Verified by the tuition.in editorial team
Last reviewed on 2 July 2026. Written and reviewed by subject-matter experts — read about our process.
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