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

  • 1Identify the three characters and their traits
  • 2Narrate the plot and the two quarrels that derail the proposal
  • 3Explain the satire on marriage among the landed gentry
  • 4Analyse the comic and farcical elements of the play
  • 5Answer character-based and value-based questions on the play
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Why this chapter matters
As the only play in First Flight, 'The Proposal' is a distinctive, high-frequency source of character- and theme-based questions in the RBSE board. Its comedy and clear plot make it an enjoyable, reliable scorer.

The Proposal — RBSE Class 10 English (First Flight)

A man arrives, dressed up and trembling, to ask for a woman's hand in marriage. It should be tender and romantic. Instead, within minutes they are screaming at each other — first about a meadow, then about a dog — and the proposal is nearly wrecked twice. Anton Chekhov's little farce is a wickedly funny look at how marriage, among the quarrelsome landed gentry, has less to do with love than with land, property and pride.


1. The characters

  • Ivan Vassilevitch Lomov — a wealthy but nervous, hypochondriac landowner (about 35), who comes to propose. He fusses constantly about his health (palpitations, a "twitching" side, sleeplessness).
  • Natalya Stepanovna — the 25-year-old daughter of the neighbour; unmarried, sharp-tongued and equally quarrelsome.
  • Stepan Stepanovitch Chubukov — Natalya's father, an old landowner; delighted at first, then furious, then delighted again.

2. The plot — a proposal derailed twice

Lomov visits his neighbour Chubukov, formally dressed, and announces he has come to ask for Natalya's hand in marriage. Chubukov is overjoyed and goes to fetch her. Lomov, alone, frets nervously about his health and about the need to marry at his age.

Quarrel 1 — the land (Oxen Meadows). Before Lomov can actually propose, he and Natalya fall into a furious argument over a strip of land called Oxen Meadows — each insists it belongs to their family. Chubukov joins in; the three shout, insult each other's families, and Lomov, agitated, feels his heart pounding and his side twitching. Natalya orders him out. Only after he leaves does Chubukov reveal to Natalya that Lomov had come to propose — and she, horrified at losing a suitor, cries "Bring him back!" and Lomov is called in again.

Quarrel 2 — the dogs (Squeezer vs Guess). Just as things calm, they begin arguing about whose hunting dog is better — Lomov's Guess or Natalya's Squeezer. The quarrel grows so heated that Lomov, overcome by his excitement and "palpitations," faints (they briefly think he has died). When he revives, Chubukov seizes the moment, quickly joins their hands and declares them engaged — and the two, still bickering about the dogs, are married. The play ends with the newly engaged couple still arguing as Chubukov calls for champagne.


3. Themes

  • Marriage among the landed gentry — a satire showing that such marriages are driven by property, wealth and social convenience, not love.
  • The quarrelsome, petty nature of people — the trivial disputes (a meadow, a dog) expose human pride, stubbornness and short temper.
  • Comedy and farce — exaggerated characters, absurd quarrels and Lomov's fainting create pure comedy; the humour is the point.
  • Human weaknesses — hypochondria (Lomov), sharp-tonguedness (Natalya), and opportunism (Chubukov) are gently mocked.

4. What makes it funny — and pointed

The comedy comes from irony: two people who clearly want to marry keep sabotaging it over things that don't matter. Chekhov uses their silly fights to satirise a society where a "proposal" is really a property negotiation, and where pride will not yield even for love. That the couple gets engaged while still quarrelling is the final joke — and a sly prediction of a bickering married life to come.


5. Closing thought

"The Proposal" is a small comic masterpiece that hides a sharp point inside its laughter. Beneath the shouting about Oxen Meadows and the dogs Guess and Squeezer lies Chekhov's quiet observation: among these landowners, marriage is a matter of land and status, and human beings are absurdly quarrelsome and proud, ready to fight over trifles even against their own interest. And yet — comically, inevitably — the proposal succeeds. Love, or at least marriage, wins through the noise.

For the RBSE board, remember the three characters and their traits, the two quarrels (Oxen Meadows; the dogs Guess vs Squeezer), Lomov's fainting and the sudden engagement, and the satire on marriage, property and human pettiness. Value-based and character-based questions are common.

Key formulas & results

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

Playwright
Anton Chekhov (a one-act comic play / farce)
Russian dramatist.
Characters
Lomov (nervous hypochondriac suitor) · Natalya (sharp-tongued) · Chubukov (her father)
All quarrelsome.
Quarrel 1
Over land — 'Oxen Meadows'
Each claims it belongs to their family.
Quarrel 2
Over whose dog is better — Guess (Lomov) vs Squeezer (Natalya)
Trivial but furious.
Climax
Lomov faints from excitement; Chubukov joins their hands, declares them engaged
They marry while still arguing.
Theme
Satire on property-driven marriage and human quarrelsomeness/pride
Comedy/farce.
⚠️

Common mistakes & fixes

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

WATCH OUT
Mixing up the two dogs
Guess is Lomov's dog; Squeezer is Natalya's dog. They quarrel over which is the better hunting dog.
WATCH OUT
Saying Lomov actually proposes before the quarrel
He never manages a proper proposal — the quarrel over Oxen Meadows erupts first, and the engagement is finally forced through by Chubukov amid the dog quarrel.
WATCH OUT
Thinking the play is a tragedy
It is a COMEDY/farce. The exaggerated quarrels, Lomov's fainting, and the couple bickering even while getting engaged are all comic.
WATCH OUT
Missing the satire
Chekhov satirises marriages among the landed gentry as driven by land and property rather than love, and mocks human pettiness and pride.
WATCH OUT
Forgetting how the engagement happens
After Lomov faints and revives, Chubukov quickly joins the couple's hands and declares them engaged — they are still arguing about the dogs as the play ends.

Practice problems

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

Q1EASY· Fact-recall
Who wrote 'The Proposal', and what kind of play is it?
Show solution
✦ Answer: Anton Chekhov; it is a one-act comic play (a farce).
Q2EASY· Fact-recall
What are the names of Lomov's and Natalya's dogs?
Show solution
✦ Answer: Lomov's dog is Guess; Natalya's dog is Squeezer.
Q3EASY· Comprehension
Why does Lomov visit Chubukov's house?
Show solution
To ask for the hand of Chubukov's daughter, Natalya, in marriage. ✦ Answer: to propose marriage to Natalya.
Q4MEDIUM· Plot
What are the two things Lomov and Natalya quarrel about?
Show solution
Step 1 — First, they quarrel over a strip of land called Oxen Meadows, each claiming it belongs to their family. Step 2 — Later, they quarrel over whose hunting dog is better — Lomov's Guess or Natalya's Squeezer. ✦ Answer: the land 'Oxen Meadows' and whose dog (Guess vs Squeezer) is better.
Q5MEDIUM· Character
Describe Lomov's character.
Show solution
Step 1 — Lomov is a wealthy landowner but a nervous, anxious hypochondriac, always worrying about his health (palpitations, a twitching side, sleeplessness). Step 2 — He is also quarrelsome and easily excited, arguing fiercely over trifles. ✦ Answer: a nervous, hypochondriac and quarrelsome but well-off landowner.
Q6MEDIUM· Climax
How does the engagement finally take place?
Show solution
Step 1 — During the quarrel over the dogs, the over-excited Lomov faints (they even fear he has died). Step 2 — When he revives, Chubukov quickly seizes the moment, joins the couple's hands and declares them engaged — even as they resume arguing. ✦ Answer: after Lomov faints and revives, Chubukov joins their hands and declares them engaged.
Q7HARD· Theme
How does 'The Proposal' satirise marriage among the landed gentry?
Show solution
Step 1 — Lomov comes to marry not out of love but because it is time and Natalya is a suitable, propertied match. Step 2 — The 'proposal' repeatedly collapses into fights over land (Oxen Meadows) and property (the dogs), showing what really matters to them. Step 3 — Pride and stubbornness nearly wreck a marriage both sides want. Step 4 — That they get engaged while still quarrelling mocks such marriages as loveless, property-driven and destined to be full of squabbles. ✦ Answer: it mocks gentry marriage as driven by land/property and pride rather than love, exposed through their absurd quarrels.
Q8HARD· Value-based
What human weaknesses does the play expose, and what can we learn from it?
Show solution
Step 1 — It exposes quarrelsomeness and stubborn pride — fighting over trifles even against one's own interest. Step 2 — It mocks greed and materialism — valuing land and possessions over relationships. Step 3 — It shows how anxiety and short temper (Lomov) and sharp-tonguedness (Natalya) create needless conflict. Step 4 — Lesson: patience, humility and keeping trivial matters in perspective help preserve relationships. ✦ Answer: it exposes pettiness, pride and materialism; we learn the value of patience, humility and not quarrelling over trifles.

5-minute revision

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

  • Playwright: Anton Chekhov; a one-act comedy/farce.
  • Characters: Lomov (nervous hypochondriac suitor), Natalya (sharp-tongued), Chubukov (her father).
  • Lomov comes to propose to Natalya; Chubukov is delighted.
  • Quarrel 1: over the land 'Oxen Meadows' — each claims ownership.
  • Quarrel 2: over whose dog is better — Guess (Lomov) vs Squeezer (Natalya).
  • Lomov faints from excitement; on reviving, Chubukov joins their hands and declares them engaged.
  • They are still quarrelling as the play ends.
  • Theme: satire on property-driven gentry marriage and human quarrelsomeness/pride; pure comedy.

Rajasthan (RBSE) marks blueprint

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

Typical chapter weightage: 4–6 marks

Question typeMarks eachTypical countWhat it tests
MCQ / extract-based11–2Playwright, dogs, characters
Short answer2–31–2The quarrels; character traits; the climax
Long answer41Satire on marriage; human weaknesses / value-based
Prep strategy
  • Fix the two quarrels (Oxen Meadows; Guess vs Squeezer) and the fainting climax
  • Prepare character sketches of Lomov, Natalya and Chubukov
  • Be ready to explain the satire on property-driven marriage
  • Note the comic irony of getting engaged while quarrelling

Where this shows up in the real world

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

Understanding satire

A perfect, accessible example of social satire and comedy for literature study.

Drama and performance

As a one-act play, it is ideal for reading aloud, role-play and stage performance.

Conflict and communication

It humorously shows how pride and pettiness turn small issues into big fights — a lesson in perspective.

Character study

The exaggerated characters are great for studying how playwrights reveal traits through dialogue.

Values in relationships

It prompts reflection on patience, humility and what truly matters in relationships.

World literature

It introduces students to Anton Chekhov, a master of the short story and drama.

Exam strategy

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

  1. Name the two quarrels precisely (Oxen Meadows; Guess vs Squeezer).
  2. Support character sketches with specific traits and actions.
  3. For theme questions, explain the satire on property-driven marriage.
  4. Note the comic irony of the ending (engaged while quarrelling).
  5. For extract questions, identify the speaker and the quarrel.
  6. In value-based answers, name the weaknesses (pride, pettiness, materialism) and the lesson.

Going beyond the textbook

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

  • Farce and comedy of manners as dramatic forms.
  • How Chekhov reveals character and satire purely through dialogue.
  • The one-act play structure — unity of time, place and action.
  • Comparing Chekhov's comedy with his famous short stories.

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 — the only play; character and theme questions most years
NTSE / state scholarshipLow–Medium — reading comprehension
CBSE/other board EnglishHigh — same prescribed text
Olympiads (English/IEO)Low–Medium — drama and satire

Questions students ask

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

Yes. RBSE prescribes the NCERT reader 'First Flight' for Class 10 English, and 'The Proposal' by Anton Chekhov is the one-act play in it. RBSE (BSER Ajmer) sets the exam pattern and marking.

First, Lomov and Natalya quarrel over a strip of land called Oxen Meadows, each claiming it belongs to their family. Later they quarrel over whose hunting dog is better — Lomov's Guess or Natalya's Squeezer.

During the dog quarrel, the over-excited Lomov faints. When he revives, Chubukov quickly joins the couple's hands and declares them engaged — and they are still bickering (about the dogs) as the curtain falls.

It satirises marriage among the landed gentry, showing it to be driven by land, property and social convenience rather than love, and it mocks human pettiness, pride and quarrelsomeness — people who fight over trifles even against their own interest.

Because of its exaggerated, quarrelsome characters, the absurd fights over a meadow and a dog, Lomov's dramatic fainting, and the ironic ending where the couple get engaged while still arguing — all designed to make the audience laugh.
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Last reviewed on 2 July 2026. Written and reviewed by subject-matter experts — read about our process.
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