CBSE · NCERT · Class 10 English · Chapter 9

NCERT Solutions: Class 10 English Chapter 9 - First Flight: The Proposal

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Chapter-wise NCERT intext questions and exercise answers for First Flight: The Proposal, grounded in the official textbook.

Questions are taken verbatim from the NCERT textbook; answers were grounded against the chapter's content during generation. Items needing review are marked.
Sections in this chapter
Thinking about the Play 3
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1Thinking about the Play3 questions
Q.1What does Chubukov at first suspect that Lomov has come for? Is he sincere when he later says “And I’ve always loved you, my angel, as if you were my own son”? Find reasons for your answer from the play.v
Solution

The changing language exposes comic self-interest.

Answer:

Chubukov first suspects Lomov has come to borrow money. His later declaration is not fully sincere: before learning of the proposal he is guarded, and during the quarrels he calls Lomov a fool, villain and intriguer. His affection appears when the marriage benefits his daughter and disappears whenever property or dogs are disputed.

Q.2Chubukov says of Natalya: “... as if she won’t consent! She’s in love; egad, she’s like a lovesick cat…” Would you agree? Find reasons for your answer.v
Solution

Grounded in her reversal after Lomov leaves and the renewed dog quarrel.

Answer:

Natalya clearly wants the match: when she learns Lomov came to propose, she becomes hysterical and orders her father to bring him back at once. Yet while he is present she quarrels fiercely over Oxen Meadows and the dogs. She is therefore eager to marry him but too proud and argumentative to behave like a conventional romantic lover.

Q.3(i) Find all the words and expressions in the play that the characters use to speak about each other, and the accusations and insults they hurl at each other. (For example, Lomov in the end calls Chubukov an intriguer; but earlier, Chubukov has himself called Lomov a “malicious, doublefaced intriguer.” Again, Lomov begins by describing Natalya as “an excellent housekeeper, not bad-looking, well-educated.”) (ii) Then think of five adjectives or adjectival expressions of your own to describe each character in the play. (iii) Can you now imagine what these characters will quarrel about next?v
Solution

Parts (ii) and (iii) are model responses grounded in the characters’ repeated behaviour.

Answer:

(i) Their language swings from ‘my angel’, ‘my darling’, ‘excellent housekeeper’ and ‘well-educated’ to ‘grabber’, ‘guzzling gambler’, ‘malicious, doublefaced intriguer’, ‘blind hen’, ‘turnip-ghost’, ‘old rat’, ‘Jesuit’, ‘boy’, ‘pup’ and ‘milksop’. (ii) Lomov is nervous, calculating, hypochondriacal, proud and quarrelsome; Natalya is strong-willed, practical, possessive, impulsive and argumentative; Chubukov is theatrical, opportunistic, short-tempered, manipulative and comic. (iii) A model next quarrel could concern the wedding arrangements or which family has better horses, because each turns minor status questions into contests.