Answer:
Yes, Natalya is in love. This is clear by the way she behaves when she gets to know that Lomov came to propose to her. She starts weeping and asks her father to bring Lomov at once.
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The Proposal – Comprehensive Web Content
This is an expanded study resource for The Proposal by Anton Chekhov (First Flight). Use this alongside the chapter notes for complete board exam preparation.
Detailed Summary
Lomov arrives to propose to Natalya but argues about Oxen Meadows ownership. Expelled, he returns when Natalya learns he came to propose. They argue again — about whose dog is better. Lomov collapses from nerves. Chubukov hastily pronounces them engaged. They immediately resume arguing. The play satirises property-obsessed, petty people incapable of prioritising.
Theme Analysis
Satire on Marriage
Marriage here is about property and status, not love. Lomov proposes because he needs a wife for his estate.
Pride and Pettiness
Trivial disputes (a meadow, a dog) are fought with life-or-death intensity.
Farce
All three characters work against their own interests — all want the proposal to succeed yet all sabotage it.
Character Study
Nervous, hypochondriac, argumentative, weak-willed
Stubborn, proud, emotional, pragmatic
Opportunistic, dramatic, interfering
Literary Devices & Techniques
- Farce: Exaggerated conflicts, physical comedy
- Dramatic Irony: Natalya doesn’t know Lomov came to propose
- Hyperbole: Lomov’s dramatic symptoms, Natalya’s hysterics
- Stage Directions: Add physical comedy: "(clutching his heart)"
- Repetition: Arguments restart after each resolution
Board Exam Questions with Model Answers
Q: Why did Lomov come to Chubukov’s house? (2 marks)
Model Answer: Lomov came to propose marriage to Chubukov’s daughter Natalya. He was dressed formally and was very nervous, as he needed a wife to help manage his estate and was getting older.
Q: How does Chekhov use humour to convey a serious message? (5 marks)
Model Answer: Chekhov uses farce — exaggerated arguments, physical comedy, and absurd situations — to satirise a society obsessed with property and social status. Lomov proposes for practical reasons, not love. The couple cannot stop arguing even during their engagement. The humour masks a serious critique: when property matters more than people, relationships become absurd contests. The laughter provokes reflection on our own pettiness.
Key Vocabulary
Refer to the chapter notes and teacher aid for a complete vocabulary list. Focus on understanding words in context rather than memorising definitions in isolation.
Revision Checklist
- Can you summarise the text in 80 words?
- Can you name all major characters and their traits?
- Can you identify at least 3 literary devices with examples?
- Can you write a 5-mark answer on the main theme?
- Have you practised all textbook exercise questions?