Texts. Stories for children - Lev Nikolaevich Tolstoy

Lev Nikolaevich Tolstoy, stories, fairy tales and fables in prose for children. The collection includes not only the well-known stories of Leo Tolstoy “Kostochka”, “Kitten”, “Bulka”, but also such rare works as “Treat everyone kindly”, “Do not torture animals”, “Don’t be lazy”, “The boy and father" and many others.

Jackdaw and jug

Galka wanted to drink. There was a jug of water in the yard, and the jug only had water at the bottom.
Jackdaw was out of reach.
She began throwing pebbles into the jug and added so many that the water became higher and could be drunk.

Rats and egg

Two rats found an egg. They wanted to share it and eat it; but they see a crow flying and wants to take an egg.
The rats began to think about how to steal an egg from a crow. Carry? - do not grab; roll? - it can be broken.
And the rats decided this: one lay on its back, grabbed the egg with its paws, and the other carried it by the tail, and, like on a sleigh, pulled the egg under the floor.

Bug

Bug carried a bone across the bridge. Look, her shadow is in the water.
It occurred to the Bug that there was not a shadow in the water, but a Bug and a bone.
She let her bone go and take it. She didn’t take that one, but hers sank to the bottom.

Wolf and goat

The wolf sees that a goat is grazing on a stone mountain and he cannot get close to it; he says to her: “You should go down: here the place is more level, and the grass is much sweeter for you to feed.”
And the Goat says: “That’s not why you, wolf, are calling me down: you’re not worrying about mine, but about your own food.”

Mouse, cat and rooster

The mouse went out for a walk. She walked around the yard and came back to her mother.
“Well, mother, I saw two animals. One is scary and the other is kind.”
The mother said: “Tell me, what kind of animals are these?”
The mouse said: “There’s a scary one, he walks around the yard like this: his legs are black, his crest is red, his eyes are bulging, and his nose is hooked. When I walked past, he opened his mouth, raised his leg and began screaming so loudly that I didn’t know where to go from fear!”
“It’s a rooster,” said the old mouse. - He does no harm to anyone, don’t be afraid of him. Well, what about the other animal?
- The other was lying in the sun and warming himself. His neck is white, his legs are gray, smooth, he licks his white chest and moves his tail slightly, looking at me.
The old mouse said: “You are a fool, you are a fool. After all, it’s the cat itself.”

Kitty

There were brother and sister - Vasya and Katya; and they had a cat. In the spring the cat disappeared. The children looked for her everywhere, but could not find her.

One day they were playing near the barn and heard someone meowing in thin voices overhead. Vasya climbed the ladder under the roof of the barn. And Katya stood and kept asking:

- Found? Found?

But Vasya did not answer her. Finally Vasya shouted to her:

- Found! Our cat... and she has kittens; so wonderful; come here quickly.

Katya ran home, took out milk and brought it to the cat.

There were five kittens. When they grew a little and began to crawl out from under the corner where they had hatched, the children chose one kitten, gray with white paws, and brought it into the house. The mother gave away all the other kittens, but left this one to the children. The children fed him, played with him and took him to bed.

One day the children went to play on the road and took a kitten with them.

The wind moved the straw along the road, and the kitten played with the straw, and the children rejoiced at him. Then they found sorrel near the road, went to collect it and forgot about the kitten.

Suddenly they heard someone shouting loudly:

“Back, back!” - and they saw that the hunter was galloping, and in front of him two dogs saw a kitten and wanted to grab it. And the kitten, stupid, instead of running, sat down to the ground, hunched its back and looked at the dogs.

Katya was scared of the dogs, screamed and ran away from them. And Vasya, as best he could, ran towards the kitten and at the same time as the dogs ran up to it.

The dogs wanted to grab the kitten, but Vasya fell with his stomach on the kitten and blocked it from the dogs.

The hunter jumped up and drove the dogs away, and Vasya brought the kitten home and never took it with him into the field again.

Old man and apple trees

The old man was planting apple trees. They told him: “Why do you need apple trees? It will take a long time to wait for fruit from these apple trees, and you will not eat any apples from them.” The old man said: “I won’t eat, others will eat, they will thank me.”

Boy and father (The truth is most precious)

The boy was playing and accidentally broke an expensive cup.
Nobody saw it.
The father came and asked:
- Who broke it?
The boy shook with fear and said:
- I.
Father said:
- Thank you for telling the truth.

Do not torture animals (Varya and Chizh)

Varya had a siskin. The siskin lived in a cage and never sang.
Varya came to the siskin. - “It’s time for you, little siskin, to sing.”
- “Let me go free, in freedom I will sing all day long.”

Don't be lazy

There were two men - Peter and Ivan, they mowed the meadows together. The next morning Peter came with his family and began to clean up his meadow. The day was hot and the grass was dry; By evening there was hay.
But Ivan didn’t go to clean, but stayed at home. On the third day, Peter took the hay home, and Ivan was just getting ready to row.
By evening it started to rain. Peter had hay, but Ivan had all his grass rotted away.

Don't take it by force

Petya and Misha had a horse. They began to argue: whose horse?
They began to tear each other's horses.
- “Give it to me, my horse!” - “No, give it to me, the horse is not yours, but mine!”
The mother came, took the horse, and the horse became no one's.

Don't overeat

The mouse was gnawing on the floor, and there was a gap. The mouse went into the gap and found a lot of food. The mouse was greedy and ate so much that its belly became full. When it became day, the mouse went home, but its belly was so full that it did not fit through the crack.

Treat everyone kindly

The squirrel jumped from branch to branch and fell straight onto the sleepy wolf. The wolf jumped up and wanted to eat her. The squirrel began to ask: “Let me go.” The wolf said: “Okay, I’ll let you in, just tell me why you squirrels are so cheerful? I’m always bored, but I look at you, you’re up there, playing and jumping.” The squirrel said: “Let me go to the tree first, and from there I’ll tell you, otherwise I’m afraid of you.” The wolf let go, and the squirrel went up a tree and from there said: “You’re bored because you’re angry. Anger burns your heart. And we are cheerful because we are kind and do no harm to anyone.”

Respect old people

The grandmother had a granddaughter; Before, the granddaughter was sweet and still slept, and the grandmother herself baked bread, swept the hut, washed, sewed, spun and weaved for her granddaughter; and then the grandmother became old and lay down on the stove and kept sleeping. And the granddaughter baked, washed, sewed, weaved and spun for her grandmother.

How my aunt talked about how she learned to sew

When I was six years old, I asked my mother to let me sew. She said: “You are still small, you will only prick your fingers”; and I kept pestering. Mother took a red piece of paper from the chest and gave it to me; then she threaded a red thread into the needle and showed me how to hold it. I began to sew, but could not make even stitches; one stitch came out large, and the other hit the very edge and broke through. Then I pricked my finger and tried not to cry, but my mother asked me: “What are you doing?” - I couldn’t resist and cried. Then my mother told me to go play.

When I went to bed, I kept imagining stitches: I kept thinking about how I could quickly learn to sew, and it seemed so difficult to me that I would never learn. And now I’ve grown up and don’t remember how I learned to sew; and when I teach my girl to sew, I’m surprised how she can’t hold a needle.

Bulka (Officer's Story)

I had a face. Her name was Bulka. She was all black, only the tips of her front paws were white.

In all faces, the lower jaw is longer than the upper and the upper teeth extend beyond the lower ones; but Bulka’s lower jaw protruded forward so much that a finger could be placed between the lower and upper teeth. Bulka’s face was wide; the eyes are large, black and shiny; and white teeth and fangs always stuck out. He looked like a blackamoor. Bulka was quiet and did not bite, but he was very strong and tenacious. When he would cling to something, he would clench his teeth and hang like a rag, and, like a tick, he could not be torn off.

Once they let him attack a bear, and he grabbed the bear’s ear and hung like a leech. The bear beat him with his paws, pressed him to himself, threw him from side to side, but could not tear him away and fell on his head to crush Bulka; but Bulka held on to it until they poured cold water on him.

I took him as a puppy and raised him myself. When I went to serve in the Caucasus, I didn’t want to take him and left him quietly, and ordered him to be locked up. At the first station, I was about to board another transfer station, when suddenly I saw something black and shiny rolling along the road. It was Bulka in his copper collar. He flew at full speed towards the station. He rushed towards me, licked my hand and stretched out in the shadows under the cart. His tongue stuck out the entire palm of his hand. He then pulled it back, swallowing drool, then again stuck it out to the whole palm. He was in a hurry, did not have time to breathe, his sides were jumping. He turned from side to side and tapped his tail on the ground.

I found out later that after me he broke through the frame and jumped out of the window and, right in my wake, galloped along the road and rode like that for twenty miles in the heat.

Milton and Bulka (Story)

I got myself a pointing dog for pheasants. This dog's name was Milton: she was tall, thin, speckled gray, with long wings and ears, and very strong and smart. They didn’t fight with Bulka. Not a single dog ever snapped at Bulka. Sometimes he would just show his teeth, and the dogs would tuck their tails and move away. One day I went with Milton to buy pheasants. Suddenly Bulka ran after me into the forest. I wanted to drive him away, but I couldn’t. And it was a long way to go home to take him. I thought that he would not disturb me, and moved on; but as soon as Milton smelled a pheasant in the grass and began to look, Bulka rushed forward and began poking around in all directions. He tried before Milton to raise a pheasant. He heard something in the grass, jumped, spun: but his instincts were bad, and he could not find the trail alone, but looked at Milton and ran to where Milton was going. As soon as Milton sets off on the trail, Bulka runs ahead. I recalled Bulka, beat him, but could not do anything with him. As soon as Milton began to search, he rushed forward and interfered with him. I wanted to go home, because I thought that my hunt was ruined, but Milton figured out better than me how to deceive Bulka. This is what he did: as soon as Bulka runs in front of him, Milton will leave the trail, turn in the other direction and pretend that he is looking. Bulka will rush to where Milton pointed, and Milton will look back at me, wave his tail and follow the real trail again. Bulka again runs to Milton, runs ahead, and again Milton will deliberately take ten steps to the side, deceive Bulka and again lead me straight. So throughout the hunt he deceived Bulka and did not let him ruin the matter.

Shark (Story)

Our ship was anchored off the coast of Africa. It was a beautiful day, a fresh wind was blowing from the sea; but in the evening the weather changed: it became stuffy and as if hot air from the Sahara desert was blowing at us from a heated stove.

Before sunset, the captain came out onto the deck, shouted: “Swim!” - and in one minute the sailors jumped into the water, lowered the sail into the water, tied it and set up a bath in the sail.

There were two boys with us on the ship. The boys were the first to jump into the water, but they felt cramped in the sail; they decided to race against each other in the open sea.

Both, like lizards, stretched out in the water and, with all their strength, swam to the place where there was a barrel above the anchor.

One boy at first overtook his friend, but then began to fall behind. The boy's father, an old artilleryman, stood on the deck and admired his son. When the son began to lag behind, the father shouted to him: “Don’t give him away! push yourself!”

Suddenly someone shouted from the deck: “Shark!” - and we all saw the back of a sea monster in the water.

The shark swam straight towards the boys.

Back! back! come back! shark! - the artilleryman shouted. But the guys didn’t hear him, they swam on, laughing and shouting even more fun and louder than before.

The artilleryman, pale as a sheet, looked at the children without moving.

The sailors lowered the boat, rushed into it and, bending their oars, rushed as hard as they could towards the boys; but they were still far from them when the shark was no more than 20 steps away.

At first the boys did not hear what they were shouting and did not see the shark; but then one of them looked back, and we all heard a high-pitched squeal, and the boys swam in different directions.

This screech seemed to awaken the artilleryman. He jumped up and ran towards the guns. He turned his trunk, lay down next to the cannon, took aim and took the fuse.

All of us, no matter how many of us were on the ship, froze in fear and waited for what would happen.

A shot rang out, and we saw that the artilleryman fell near the cannon and covered his face with his hands. We did not see what happened to the shark and the boys, because for a minute the smoke obscured our eyes.

But when the smoke dispersed over the water, at first a quiet murmur was heard from all sides, then this murmur became stronger, and finally, a loud, joyful cry was heard from all sides.

The old artilleryman opened his face, stood up and looked at the sea.

The yellow belly of a dead shark swayed across the waves. In a few minutes the boat sailed to the boys and brought them to the ship.

Lion and dog (True)

Illustration by Nastya Aksenova

In London they showed wild animals and for viewing they took money or dogs and cats to feed the wild animals.

One man wanted to see the animals: he grabbed a little dog on the street and brought it to the menagerie. They let him in to watch, but they took the little dog and threw him into a cage with a lion to be eaten.

The dog tucked its tail and pressed itself into the corner of the cage. The lion approached her and smelled her.

The dog lay down on its back, raised its paws and began wagging its tail.

The lion touched it with his paw and turned it over.

The dog jumped up and stood on its hind legs in front of the lion.

The lion looked at the dog, turned his head from side to side and did not touch it.

When the owner threw meat to the lion, the lion tore off a piece and left it for the dog.

In the evening, when the lion went to bed, the dog lay down next to him and put her head on his paw.

Since then, the dog lived in the same cage with the lion, the lion did not touch her, ate food, slept with her, and sometimes played with her.

One day the master came to the menagerie and recognized his dog; he said that the dog was his own, and asked the owner of the menagerie to give it to him. The owner wanted to give it back, but as soon as they began to call the dog to take it from the cage, the lion bristled and growled.

So the lion and the dog lived for a whole year in the same cage.

A year later the dog got sick and died. The lion stopped eating, but kept sniffing, licking the dog and touching it with his paw.

When he realized that she was dead, he suddenly jumped up, bristled, began to whip his tail on the sides, rushed to the wall of the cage and began to gnaw at the bolts and the floor.

All day long he struggled, thrashed about in the cage and roared, then he lay down next to the dead dog and fell silent. The owner wanted to take away the dead dog, but the lion would not let anyone near it.

The owner thought that the lion would forget his grief if he was given another dog, and he let a live dog into his cage; but the lion immediately tore her to pieces. Then he hugged the dead dog with his paws and lay there for five days.

On the sixth day the lion died.

Jump (Byl)

One ship circumnavigated the world and was returning home. The weather was calm, all the people were on deck. A large monkey was spinning around in the middle of the people and amusing everyone. This monkey writhed, jumped, made funny faces, imitated people, and it was clear that she knew that they were amusing her, and that is why she became even more at odds.

She jumped up to a 12-year-old boy, the son of a ship's captain, tore his hat off his head, put it on and quickly climbed up the mast. Everyone laughed, but the boy was left without a hat and did not know whether to laugh or cry.

The monkey sat down on the first crossbar of the mast, took off his hat and began to tear it with his teeth and paws. She seemed to be teasing the boy, pointing at him and making faces at him. The boy threatened her and shouted at her, but she tore her hat even angrier. The sailors began to laugh louder, and the boy blushed, took off his jacket and rushed after the monkey to the mast. In one minute he climbed the rope to the first crossbar; but the monkey was even more dexterous and faster than him, and at the very moment he was thinking of grabbing his hat, he climbed even higher.

So you won’t leave me! - the boy shouted and climbed higher. The monkey beckoned him again and climbed even higher, but the boy was already overcome with enthusiasm and did not lag behind. So the monkey and the boy reached the very top in one minute. At the very top, the monkey stretched out to its full length and, hooking its back hand1 onto the rope, hung its hat on the edge of the last crossbar, and climbed to the top of the mast and writhed from there, showed its teeth and rejoiced. From the mast to the end of the crossbar, where the hat hung, there were two arshins, so it was impossible to get it except by letting go of the rope and the mast.

But the boy became very excited. He dropped the mast and stepped onto the crossbar. Everyone on deck looked and laughed at what the monkey and the captain's son were doing; but when they saw that he let go of the rope and stepped onto the crossbar, shaking his arms, everyone froze with fear.

All he had to do was stumble, and he would have smashed to pieces on the deck. And even if he hadn’t stumbled, but had reached the edge of the crossbar and taken his hat, it would have been difficult for him to turn around and walk back to the mast. Everyone looked at him silently and waited to see what would happen.

Suddenly, someone among the people gasped in fear. The boy came to his senses from this scream, looked down and staggered.

At this time, the ship's captain, the boy's father, left the cabin. He carried a gun to shoot seagulls2. He saw his son on the mast, and immediately took aim at his son and shouted: “Into the water! jump into the water now! I’ll shoot you!” The boy was staggering, but did not understand. “Jump or I’ll shoot you!.. One, two...” and as soon as the father shouted: “three,” the boy swung his head down and jumped.

Like a cannonball, the boy’s body splashed into the sea, and before the waves had time to cover him, 20 young sailors had already jumped from the ship into the sea. About 40 seconds later - it seemed like a long time to everyone - the boy's body emerged. He was grabbed and dragged onto the ship. After a few minutes, water started pouring out of his mouth and nose and he began to breathe.

When the captain saw this, he suddenly screamed, as if something was strangling him, and ran to his cabin so that no one would see him cry.

Fire dogs (Byl)

It often happens that in cities during fires, children are left in houses and they cannot be pulled out, because they hide from fear and are silent, and from the smoke it is impossible to see them. Dogs in London are trained for this purpose. These dogs live with firefighters, and when a house catches fire, the firefighters send the dogs to pull the children out. One such dog in London saved twelve children; her name was Bob.

One time the house caught fire. And when the firefighters arrived at the house, a woman ran out to them. She cried and said that there was a two-year-old girl left in the house. The firefighters sent Bob. Bob ran up the stairs and disappeared into the smoke. Five minutes later he ran out of the house and carried the girl by the shirt in his teeth. The mother rushed to her daughter and cried with joy that her daughter was alive. The firefighters petted the dog and examined it to see if it was burned; but Bob was eager to go back into the house. The firefighters thought there was something else alive in the house and let him in. The dog ran into the house and soon ran out with something in its teeth. When the people looked at what she was carrying, they all burst out laughing: she was carrying a large doll.

Kostochka (Byl)

The mother bought plums and wanted to give them to the children after lunch. They were on the plate. Vanya never ate plums and kept sniffing them. And he really liked them. I really wanted to eat it. He kept walking past the plums. When there was no one in the upper room, he could not resist, grabbed one plum and ate it. Before dinner, the mother counted the plums and saw that one was missing. She told her father.

At dinner, the father says: “What, children, didn’t anyone eat one plum?” Everyone said: "No." Vanya turned red as a lobster and also said: “No, I didn’t eat.”

Then the father said: “Whatever one of you has eaten is not good; but that’s not the problem. The trouble is that plums have seeds, and if someone doesn’t know how to eat them and swallows a seed, he will die within a day. I'm afraid of this."

Vanya turned pale and said: “No, I threw the bone out the window.”

And everyone laughed, and Vanya began to cry.

The Monkey and the Pea (Fable)

The monkey was carrying two full handfuls of peas. One pea popped out; The monkey wanted to pick it up and spilled twenty peas.
She rushed to pick it up and spilled everything. Then she got angry, scattered all the peas and ran away.

The Lion and the Mouse (Fable)

The lion was sleeping. The mouse ran over his body. He woke up and caught her. The mouse began to ask him to let her in; she said: “If you let me in, I’ll do you good.” The lion laughed that the mouse promised to do good to him, and let it go.

Then the hunters caught the lion and tied it to a tree with a rope. The mouse heard the lion's roar, came running, gnawed the rope and said: “Remember, you laughed, you didn’t think that I could do you any good, but now you see, good comes from a mouse.”

Old grandfather and granddaughter (Fable)

Grandfather became very old. His legs did not walk, his eyes did not see, his ears did not hear, he had no teeth. And when he ate, it flowed backwards from his mouth. His son and daughter-in-law stopped sitting him at the table and let him dine at the stove. They brought him lunch in a cup. He wanted to move it, but he dropped it and broke it. The daughter-in-law began to scold the old man for ruining everything in the house and breaking cups, and said that now she would give him dinner in a basin. The old man just sighed and said nothing. One day a husband and wife are sitting at home and watching - their son is playing on the floor with planks - he is working on something. The father asked: “What are you doing this, Misha?” And Misha said: “It’s me, father, who’s making the tub. When you and your mother are too old to feed you from this tub.”

The husband and wife looked at each other and began to cry. They felt ashamed that they had offended the old man so much; and from then on they began to sit him at the table and look after him.

Liar (Fable, another name - Don't lie)

The boy was guarding the sheep and, as if seeing a wolf, began to call: “Help, wolf! wolf!" The men came running and saw: it’s not true. As he did this two and three times, it happened that a wolf actually came running. The boy began to shout: “Here, here quickly, wolf!” The men thought that he was deceiving again as always - they did not listen to him. The wolf sees that there is nothing to be afraid of: he has slaughtered the entire herd in the open.

Father and Sons (Fable)

The father ordered his sons to live in harmony; they didn't listen. So he ordered a broom to be brought and said:

"Break it!"

No matter how much they fought, they could not break it. Then the father untied the broom and ordered them to break one rod at a time.

They easily broke the bars one by one.

The Ant and the Dove (Fable)

The ant went down to the stream: he wanted to drink. The wave washed over him and almost drowned him. The dove carried a branch; She saw the ant drowning, and threw it a branch into the stream. The ant sat on a branch and escaped. Then the hunter laid a net on the dove and wanted to slam it. The ant crawled up to the hunter and bit him on the leg; the hunter gasped and dropped his net. The dove fluttered and flew away.

Hen and Swallow (Fable)

The chicken found the snake eggs and began to hatch them. The swallow saw it and said:
“That's it, stupid! You bring them out, and when they grow up, they will be the first to offend you.”

The Fox and the Grapes (Fable)

The fox saw ripe bunches of grapes hanging, and began to figure out how to eat them.
She struggled for a long time, but could not reach it. To drown out her annoyance, she says: “They’re still green.”

Two Comrades (Fable)

Two comrades were walking through the forest, and a bear jumped out at them. One ran, climbed a tree and hid, while the other stayed on the road. He had nothing to do - he fell to the ground and pretended to be dead.

The bear came up to him and began to sniff: he stopped breathing.

The bear sniffed his face, thought he was dead, and walked away.

When the bear left, he climbed down from the tree and laughed: “Well,” he said, “did the bear speak in your ear?”

“And he told me that the bad people are those who run away from their comrades in danger.”

The Tsar and the Shirt (Fairy Tale)

One king was sick and said: “I will give half of the kingdom to the one who cures me.” Then all the wise men gathered and began to judge how to cure the king. No one knew. Only one sage said that the king could be cured. He said: if you find a happy person, take off his shirt and put it on the king, the king will recover. The king sent to look for a happy person throughout his kingdom; but the king's ambassadors traveled for a long time throughout the kingdom and could not find a happy person. There was not a single one that everyone was happy with. He who is rich is sick; whoever is healthy is poor; who is healthy and rich, but whose wife is not good, and whose children are not good; Everyone is complaining about something. One day, late in the evening, the king’s son was walking past a hut, and he heard someone say: “Thank God, I’ve worked hard, I’ve eaten enough and I’m going to bed; what more do I need? The king's son was delighted and ordered to take off the man's shirt, and give him as much money as he wanted for it, and take the shirt to the king. The messengers came to the happy man and wanted to take off his shirt; but the happy one was so poor that he didn’t even have a shirt on.

Two Brothers (Fairy Tale)

Two brothers went traveling together. At noon they lay down to rest in the forest. When they woke up, they saw a stone lying next to them and something was written on the stone. They began to take it apart and read:

“Whoever finds this stone, let him go straight into the forest at sunrise. A river will come in the forest: let him swim through this river to the other side. You will see a bear with cubs: take the cubs from the bear and run without looking back straight up the mountain. On the mountain you will see home, and in that home you will find happiness."

The brothers read what was written, and the youngest said:

Let's go together. Maybe we will swim across this river, bring the cubs home and find happiness together.

Then the elder said:

I won’t go into the forest for cubs and I don’t advise you to either. First thing: no one knows whether the truth is written on this stone; maybe all this was written for fun. Yes, maybe we got it wrong. Second: if the truth is written, we will go into the forest, night will come, we will not get to the river and will get lost. And even if we find a river, how will we cross it? Maybe it's fast and wide? Third: even if we swim across the river, is it really an easy matter to take the cubs away from the mother bear? She will bully us, and instead of happiness we will disappear for nothing. Fourth thing: even if we manage to carry away the cubs, we will not make it up the mountain without rest. The main thing is not said: what kind of happiness will we find in this house? Maybe there awaits us the kind of happiness we don’t need at all.

And the younger one said:

I don't think so. There would be no point in writing this on stone. And everything is written clearly. First thing: we won't get into trouble if we try. The second thing: if we don’t go, someone else will read the inscription on the stone and find happiness, and we will be left with nothing. The third thing: if you don’t bother and don’t work, nothing in the world makes you happy. Fourth: I don’t want them to think that I was afraid of anything.

Then the elder said:

And the proverb says: “To seek great happiness is to lose little”; and also: “Don’t promise a pie in the sky, but give a bird in your hands.”

And the smaller one said:

And I heard: “Fear wolves, don’t go into the forest”; and also: “Water will not flow under a lying stone.” For me, I need to go.

The younger brother went, but the older brother stayed.

As soon as the younger brother entered the forest, he attacked the river, swam across it and immediately saw a bear on the shore. She slept. He grabbed the cubs and ran without looking back up the mountain. As soon as he reached the top, people came out to meet him, they brought him a carriage, took him to the city and made him king.

He reigned for five years. In the sixth year, another king, stronger than him, came against him with war; conquered the city and drove it away. Then the younger brother went wandering again and came to the older brother.

The elder brother lived in the village neither rich nor poor. The brothers were happy with each other and began to talk about their lives.

The elder brother says:

So my truth came out: I lived quietly and well all the time, and even though you were a king, you saw a lot of grief.

And the smaller one said:

I don’t grieve that I went into the forest up the mountain then; Even though I feel bad now, I have something to remember my life with, but you have nothing to remember it with.

Lipunyushka (Fairy Tale)

An old man lived with an old woman. They had no children. The old man went to the field to plow, and the old woman stayed at home to bake pancakes. The old woman baked pancakes and said:

“If we had a son, he would take pancakes to his father; and now who will I send with?”

Suddenly a little son crawled out of the cotton and said: “Hello, mother!..”

And the old woman says: “Where did you come from, son, and what is your name?”

And the son says: “You, mother, pulled back the cotton and put it in a column, and I hatched there. And call me Lipunyushka. Give me, mother, I’ll take the pancakes to the priest.”

The old woman says: “Will you tell, Lipunyushka?”

I'll tell you, mother...

The old woman tied the pancakes in a knot and gave them to her son. Lipunyushka took the bundle and ran into the field.

In the field he came across a bump on the road; he shouts: “Father, father, move me over the hummock! I brought you pancakes."

The old man heard someone calling him from the field, went to meet his son, transplanted him over a hummock and said: “Where are you from, son?” And the boy says: “Father, I was born in cotton,” and served his father pancakes. The old man sat down to have breakfast, and the boy said: “Give me, father, I’ll plow.”

And the old man says: “You don’t have enough strength to plow.”

And Lipunyushka took up the plow and began to plow. He plows himself and sings his own songs.

A gentleman was driving past this field and saw that the old man was sitting having breakfast, and the horse was plowing alone. The master got out of the carriage and said to the old man: “How is it, old man, that your horse plows alone?”

And the old man says: “I have a boy plowing there, and he sings songs.” The master came closer, heard the songs and saw Lipunyushka.

The master says: “Old man! sell me the boy." And the old man says: “No, you can’t sell it to me, I only have one.”

And Lipunyushka says to the old man: “Sell it, father, I’ll run away from him.”

The man sold the boy for a hundred rubles. The master gave the money, took the boy, wrapped him in a handkerchief and put him in his pocket. The master arrived home and said to his wife: “I brought you joy.” And the wife says: “Show me what it is?” The master took a handkerchief out of his pocket, unfolded it, and there was nothing in the handkerchief. Lipunyushka ran away to his father a long time ago.

Three Bears (Fairy Tale)

One girl left home for the forest. She got lost in the forest and began to look for the way home, but didn’t find it, but came to a house in the forest.

The door was open; She looked at the door, saw: there was no one in the house, and entered. Three bears lived in this house. One bear had a father, his name was Mikhailo Ivanovich. He was big and shaggy. The other was a bear. She was smaller, and her name was Nastasya Petrovna. The third was a little bear cub, and his name was Mishutka. The bears were not at home, they went for a walk in the forest.

There were two rooms in the house: one was a dining room, the other was a bedroom. The girl entered the dining room and saw three cups of stew on the table. The first cup, a very large one, was Mikhaily Ivanychev’s. The second cup, smaller, was Nastasya Petrovnina’s; the third, blue cup, was Mishutkina. Next to each cup lay a spoon: large, medium and small.

The girl took the largest spoon and sipped from the largest cup; then she took the middle spoon and sipped from the middle cup; then she took a small spoon and sipped from the blue cup; and Mishutka’s stew seemed to her the best.

The girl wanted to sit down and saw three chairs at the table: one large - Mikhail Ivanovich's; the other smaller one is Nastasya Petrovnin, and the third, small, with a blue pillow is Mishutkin. She climbed onto a large chair and fell; then she sat down on the middle chair, it was awkward; then she sat down on a small chair and laughed - it was so good. She took the blue cup onto her lap and began to eat. She ate all the stew and began to rock on her chair.

The chair broke and she fell to the floor. She stood up, picked up the chair and went to another room. There were three beds: one large - Mikhail Ivanychev's; the other middle one is Nastasya Petrovnina; the third little one is Mishenkina. The girl lay down in the big one; it was too spacious for her; I lay down in the middle - it was too high; She lay down in the small bed - the bed was just right for her, and she fell asleep.

And the bears came home hungry and wanted to have dinner.

The big bear took the cup, looked and roared in a terrible voice:

WHO WAS THE BREAD IN MY CUP?

Nastasya Petrovna looked at her cup and growled not so loudly:

WHO WAS THE BREAD IN MY CUP?

And Mishutka saw his empty cup and squeaked in a thin voice:

WHO WAS BREAD IN MY CUP AND SLAUGHED IT ALL OUT?

Mikhail Ivanovich looked at his chair and growled in a terrible voice:

Nastasya Petrovna looked at her chair and growled not so loudly:

WHO WAS SITTING ON MY CHAIR AND MOVE IT OUT OF PLACE?

Mishutka looked at his broken chair and squeaked:

WHO SAT ON MY CHAIR AND BROKE IT?

The bears came to another room.

WHO WENT INTO MY BED AND CRUSHED IT? - Mikhail Ivanovich roared in a terrible voice.

WHO WENT INTO MY BED AND CRUSHED IT? - Nastasya Petrovna growled not so loudly.

And Mishenka put up a little bench, climbed into his crib and squeaked in a thin voice:

WHO WENT IN MY BED?

And suddenly he saw the girl and screamed as if he was being cut:

Here she is! Hold it, hold it! Here she is! Ay-yay! Hold it!

He wanted to bite her.

The girl opened her eyes, saw the bears and rushed to the window. It was open, she jumped out the window and ran away. And the bears did not catch up with her.

What kind of dew happens on the grass (Description)

When you go into the forest on a sunny morning in summer, you can see diamonds in the fields and grass. All these diamonds sparkle and shimmer in the sun in different colors - yellow, red, and blue. When you come closer and see what it is, you will see that these are drops of dew collected in triangular leaves of grass and glistening in the sun.

The inside of the leaf of this grass is shaggy and fluffy, like velvet. And the drops roll on the leaf and do not wet it.

When you carelessly pick a leaf with a dewdrop, the droplet will roll off like a light ball, and you will not see how it slips past the stem. It used to be that you would tear off such a cup, slowly bring it to your mouth and drink the dewdrop, and this dewdrop seemed tastier than any drink.

Touch and Vision (Reasoning)

Braid your index finger with your middle and braided fingers, touch the small ball so that it rolls between both fingers, and close your eyes. It will seem like two balls to you. Open your eyes, you will see that there is one ball. The fingers deceived, but the eyes corrected.

Look (preferably from the side) at a good, clean mirror: it will seem to you that this is a window or a door and that there is something behind there. Feel it with your finger and you will see that it is a mirror. The eyes deceived, but the fingers corrected.

Where does the water go from the sea? (Reasoning)

From springs, springs and swamps, water flows into streams, from streams into rivers, from small rivers into large rivers, and from large rivers it flows from the sea. From other sides other rivers flow into the seas, and all rivers have flowed into the seas since the world was created. Where does the water go from the sea? Why doesn't it flow over the edge?

Water from the sea rises in fog; the fog rises higher, and clouds become from the fog. The clouds are driven by the wind and spread across the ground. Water falls from the clouds to the ground. It flows from the ground into swamps and streams. From streams flows into rivers; from rivers to sea. From the sea again the water rises into the clouds, and the clouds spread across the earth...

MUNICIPAL BUDGETARY PRESCHOOL EDUCATIONAL CENTER

INSTITUTION OF COMBINED KINDERGARTEN

VIEW No. 5 “OAK” STANITSKA ARKHANGELSKAYA

MUNICIPALITY

TIKHORETSKY DISTRICT

GCD for children

senior group

Subject:"Let's talk about kindness."

Prepared by:

teacher of MBDOU No. 5 "Dubok"

Art. Arkhangelsk

Ushakova O. A.

Topic: “LET’S TALK ABOUT KINDNESS”

Target: generalize children’s ideas about kindness and emotional states that correspond to this concept, arouse the desire to do good deeds; learn to convey a person’s emotional state with the help of facial expressions, speech, drawing, and form a positive image of one’s “I”.

Children, look at your hands! In boys they are big and strong. Girls are gentle and affectionate. We love our hands, because they can do everything: hug, lift a fallen comrade, give food to hungry birds, and beautifully set the table.

Why do you, Andrey, love your hands?

Katya, do you love your hands?

What a miracle, miracles: One hand and two hands! Here is the right palm, Here is the left palm! And I’ll tell you openly - Everyone needs hands, friends. Strong hands will not rush into a fight, Kind hands will pet a dog, Smart hands know how to heal, Sensitive hands know how to make friends.

Take the hand of the one sitting next to you, feel the warmth of the hands of your friends who will be your good helpers.

The teacher offers to play a game “Guess the mood from the picture.” To do this, children exhibit their drawings depicting a girl who found her bow and a boy angry with his friend.

Questions:

What is the boy's mood?

Does he look angry?

How did you guess that he was angry?

What is the girl's mood?

Why is the girl in a good mood?

How did you determine that the girl was in a cheerful mood? - How do you feel You?

Exercise “Help the Wizard.”

The teacher draws the children's attention to the fact that the evil wizard is in a difficult situation and needs help. Today the wizard read two poems that are well known to children - about toys that he sometimes likes to play with.

1) The hostess abandoned the bunny - The bunny was left in the rain, he couldn’t get off the bench. I was completely wet.

2) They dropped Mishka on the floor, They tore off Mishka’s paw - I still won’t leave him, Because he’s good.

(A. Barto)

The wizard has photographs of three girls. He wanted to figure out which of the girls abandoned Bunny, which one tore off Mishka’s paw, and which one was very sorry for both Mishka and Bunny:

How can I find out, because there is no picture of what they are doing!

An adult offers to look at photographs of girls and help the wizard.

(Demonstration of three portraits of girls with different facial expressions: angry, indifferent and kind.)

Look what this girl is like? (Indifferent, indifferent.)

- What is her face like? What did this girl do?

Children compare the girls’ facial expressions with their actions:

She started playing with the Bunny in the garden, but quickly forgot about him and left him in the rain.

And this girl loves to fight, to offend others, she tore off Mishka’s paw and threw him right there on the floor.

And this girl is kind - she feels sorry for everyone.

Exercise “Get out of trouble.” The adult invites the children to think about how they would help Bunny and Bear out of trouble.

Children make up stories that are played out with the help of toys. The adult draws their attention to the expression on the face of the evil wizard: it has changed and become kind. (The image of the evil face is replaced by the corresponding one.) The wizard thanks the children for rescuing his favorite toys from trouble, and says that he also wants to do something nice for them.

Fairytale music plays, and the wizard gives the children a fairy tale about birds:

A Tale of Birds

A long time ago, in ancient times, birds lived in the Eternal Forest. They were visible and invisible. In every hollow, on every branch of fabulous trees and bushes, they sat and sang. And there were countless trees in that forest. The forest birds sang amazingly beautiful songs: ringing, whistling, trills, and hubbub stood in the Eternal Forest. And it seemed that the birds could live and rejoice. But it was not there...

Sadness settled in this forest because all the birds: blackbirds, bullfinches, finches, and magpies - all were black. Children also visited the Eternal Forest to pick mushrooms and berries, and the wanderers went on their way. They listened to the diverse chorus of forest birds, but could not distinguish them from each other. That is why sadness settled in the Eternal Forest. It's great when someone is different from others!

The birds got tired of living like this, and one day they turned to the most important ruler of life on Earth - the wise Sun: “O great Logos! Help us! Make our life joyful!”

The Sun listened to the birds' requests and ordered his assistant, the joyful Rainbow, to go down to the Eternal Forest, sort it out and restore order there, because without Joy, what is life?! When the beautiful Rainbow appeared in the forest in her seven-colored cloak of solar streams, the birds froze in mute amazement. And Rainbow said: “I will help you!” The birds were incredibly happy and immediately all flocked to the sorceress. The rainbow took off her magic cloak, touched it with her magic wand and said: “Let these solar streams, carrying all the colors, paint your wings in your favorite color!” And at the same moment the cloak crumbled into thousands of tiny multi-colored drops. And the rain fell on the gathered birds. Since then, birds have been rejoicing in their colorful plumage, because the Rainbow gave them: bullfinches - red feathers, redstarts and finches - orange, goldfinches and orioles - yellow, greenfinches - green, and kingfishers - blue, jays - blue, pigeons and doves - - purple feathers. And it became even better for the birds to live in the Eternal Forest, because Joy settled there. This is such a fairy tale...

At the end of the fairy tale, the wizard says to the children: “I myself didn’t notice how Joy settled in my soul.” Thank you guys for helping me get rid of my anger. “If I suddenly get angry, I will try to get rid of the anger as quickly as possible. I remember a few good ways:

· dance a riotous dance;

· stomp your feet;

· talk about your experiences.

Reading the story by L.N. Tolstoy "The old man was planting apple trees."

The old man was planting apple trees. They told him: “Why do you need these apple trees?” You will have to wait a long time for fruits from these apple trees, and you will not eat apples from them. The old man said:

I won’t eat it, others will eat it and they will thank me.

At the end of the story, the adult turns to the children with questions:

How can you call the old man's action? (Kind, benevolent, cordial.)

What kind things have you done to other people?

How did the people you did good feel? (Joy, tenderness, delight, happiness, etc.)

An adult leads children to the concept of “kindness”: “Kindness is responsiveness, a friendly attitude towards people, this is all good and useful.”

What can goodness be compared to?

(With the sun, spring rainbow, bright, beautiful flowers, mom.)

The wizards pay attention to the general mood of the group: it is very good, joyful - and offer to have fun together.

A game"Chunga-changa"

The traveler landed his ship on an island where people are joyful and carefree. As soon as he came ashore, he was surrounded by the inhabitants of the wonderful island - small black children. Both boys and girls were wearing the same colorful skirts, bracelets with bells were ringing on their hands, everyone had round earrings in their ears, beads on their necks, and beautiful feathers in their hair. With a cheerful smile, they danced to the music of V. Shainsky “Chunga-Chang” around the traveler and sang:

Miracle island, miracle island, Living on it is easy and simple, Living on it is easy and simple, Chunga-Changa!..

Exercise “Drawing music.” Children are invited to listen to calm, soft music and “draw” it (waltz by D. Kabalevsky). The wizards give children a plate with an apple as a souvenir, which will help them in difficult situations and introduce them to new friends.

I planted two hundred young apple trees and for three years, in spring and autumn, I dug them in, and wrapped them in straw to prevent hares for the winter. In the fourth year, when the snow melted, I went to look at my apple trees. They got fatter in the winter; the bark on them was glossy and plump; the branches were all intact and on all the tips and forks there were round flower buds, like peas. In some places the buds had already burst and the scarlet edges of flower leaves were visible. I knew that all the blossoms would be flowers and fruits, and I rejoiced looking at my apple trees. But when I unwrapped the first apple tree, I saw that below, above the ground, the bark of the apple tree was gnawed all the way down to the wood, like a white ring. The mice did it. I unwrapped another apple tree - and the same thing happened on the other one. Of the two hundred apple trees, not a single one remained intact. I covered the gnawed places with resin and wax; but when the apple trees blossomed, their flowers immediately fell asleep. Small leaves came out - and they withered and dried up. The bark wrinkled and turned black. Of the two hundred apple trees, only nine remained. On these nine apple trees the bark was not completely eaten away, but a strip of bark remained in the white ring. On these strips, in the place where the bark separated, growths appeared, and although the apple trees were sick, they continued to grow. The rest all disappeared, only shoots appeared below the gnawed places, and then all of them were wild.

The bark of trees is the same as the veins of a person: blood flows through the veins through a person, and through the bark the sap flows through the tree and rises into branches, leaves and flowers. You can hollow out the entire inside of a tree, as happens with old vines, but as long as the bark is alive, the tree will live; but if the bark is gone, the tree is gone. If a person’s veins are cut, he will die, firstly, because the blood will flow out, and secondly, because the blood will no longer flow through the body.

So the birch tree dries up when the guys dig a hole to drink the sap, and all the sap flows out.

So the apple trees disappeared because the mice ate up all the bark all around, and the juice could no longer flow from the roots into the branches, leaves and flowers.

Subject: L. Tolstoy. The old man was planting apple trees. Other stories.

Target: instill a love for Russian literature using the example of the works of Leo Tolstoy.

Tasks:

1) continue to develop interest in the writer’s personality;

2) develop the ability to actively participate in the discussion of literary works;

3) continue to evaluate people's behavior from the standpoint of moral standards.

The progress of direct educational activities.

I . Preparatory stage.

II . Setting the educational task, formulating the topic of the lesson.

III . Work on the topic of the lesson.

1) Acquaintance with the biography of the writer.

The teacher shows a portrait of Leo Tolstoy.

Look at the portrait of the writer: his high forehead speaks of intelligence, deep-set eyes indicate insight, a wide beard speaks of a kind grandfather.

Let's get acquainted with the life of Lev Nikolaevich. The writer was born in the village of Yasnaya Polyana. What an interesting name! “Clear” - what can you imagine when pronouncing this word? (Children's answers: sun, warm, clear day.)

This means that this place was so wonderful if Tolstoy said: “Without my Yasnaya Polyana, I can hardly imagine Russia and my attitude towards it.”

The writer's father was a count, Lev did not remember his mother, he was one and a half years old when she died. All Leo knew about his mother were other people’s stories about a good and kind woman. Mother knew four foreign languages, played the piano, drew and was an expert at telling fairy tales.

There were five children in the family of Count Tolstoy: four sons (Nikolai, Sergei, Dmitry, Lev) and the youngest daughter Mashenka. The father was engaged in farming, raising children, and read a lot. He was collecting a library. The boys were very friendly, played together, walked together, dreamed of a happy life for all people.

Little Leva loved to read the works of A. Pushkin and knew many of his poems by heart. His love for Pushkin's poetry remained with him throughout his life. He considered Pushkin his teacher when he took up writing.

After graduating from high school, Tolstoy decided to continue his education, but he entered the university only the second time, seriously preparing himself. After studying for several years, he left the university and independently continued to study a course in legal sciences. Afterwards, he and his brother Nikolai entered military service and went to serve in the Caucasus, and then to the Crimea. He commanded an artillery battery in the most dangerous sector during the defense of the city of Sevastopol. For his valiant service he was awarded an order and two medals.

After leaving the army, he came to Yasnaya Polyana, where he lived almost his entire life.

In Yasnaya Polyana, Tolstoy opened a school for peasant children, where he himself worked as a teacher. There were no textbooks then, and Tolstoy set about compiling the “ABC”, which was then used to teach many generations to read and write. Tolstoy loved children endlessly; it was his love for “little peasants,” as he called peasant children, that manifested itself in “The ABC,” on which he worked long and painstakingly. He himself spoke about this with excitement: “I don’t know what will come of it, but I put my whole soul into it.”

In our preschool lessons, we begin with the story “The Old Man Planted Apple Trees.”

IV . Physical education minute.

1) Reading a story.

The old man was planting apple trees. They told him: “Why do you need these apple trees?

It will take a long time to wait for fruit from these apple trees, and you will not eat an apple from them.”

The old man said!“I won’t eat, others will eat, they will thank me”.

2) Analysis of the story.

Guys, what act did the old man do?

How can we characterize the old man, what is he like? (kind, humane, generous, gratuitous).

What does free mean? (gives something to people and does not demand anything from them in return)

Let's slap this word syllable by syllable.

What other good deeds can you do for other people without expecting rewards or benefits for yourself? (hold the door for the person following, clear the snow in front of the house, paint the curbs and fences at the entrance, and so on)

Educational point:

Repeating the cycle: apple-seed-seedling-apple-tree-apple.

V . Reflection.

Tell me, what story did you read today?

CHAW AND JUG

L. N. Tolstoy

Galka wanted to drink. There was a jug of water in the yard, and the jug only had water at the bottom. Jackdaw was out of reach. She began throwing pebbles into the jug and added so many that the water became higher and could be drunk.

WOLF AND GOAT

L. N. Tolstoy

The wolf sees that a goat is grazing on a stone mountain and he cannot get close to it; He says to her: “You should go down: here the place is more level, and the grass is much sweeter for you to feed.”
And the Goat says: “That’s not why you, wolf, are calling me down: you’re not worrying about mine, but about your own food.”

RATS AND EGG

L. N. Tolstoy


Two rats found an egg. They wanted to share it and eat it; but they see a crow flying and wants to take an egg.
The rats began to think about how to steal an egg from a crow. Carry? - do not grab; roll? - it can be broken.
And the rats decided this: one lay on its back, grabbed the egg with its paws, and the other carried it by the tail, and, like on a sleigh, pulled the egg under the floor.

BUG

L. N. Tolstoy


Bug carried a bone across the bridge. Look, her shadow is in the water.
It occurred to the Bug that there was not a shadow in the water, but a Bug and a bone. She let her bone go and take it. She didn’t take that one, but hers sank to the bottom.

MOUSE, CAT AND ROOSTER

L. N. Tolstoy


The mouse went out for a walk. She walked around the yard and came back to her mother. “Well, mother, I saw two animals. One is scary, and the other is kind.” The mother said: “Tell me, what kind of animals are these?” The mouse said: “There’s a scary one, he walks around the yard like this: his legs are black, his crest is red, his eyes are bulging, and his nose is hooked.” When I walked past, he opened his mouth, raised his leg and began to scream so loudly that I was scared I didn’t know where to go!”
“It’s a rooster,” said the old mouse. - He does no harm to anyone, don’t be afraid of him. Well, what about the other animal?
- The other was lying in the sun and warming himself. His neck is white, his legs are gray, smooth, he licks his white chest and moves his tail slightly, looking at me. - The old mouse said: “You’re a fool, you’re a fool. After all, it’s the cat himself.”

MONKEY AND PEAS

L. N. Tolstoy


The monkey was carrying two full handfuls of peas. One pea popped out; The monkey wanted to pick it up and spilled twenty peas. She rushed to pick it up and spilled everything. Then she got angry, scattered all the peas and ran away.

LION AND MOUSE

L. N. Tolstoy


The lion was sleeping. A mouse ran over his body. He woke up and caught her. The mouse began to ask him to let her in; she said: “If you let me in, I’ll do you good.” The lion laughed that the mouse promised to do good to him, and let it go.
Then the hunters caught the lion and tied it to a tree with a rope. The mouse heard the lion's roar, came running, gnawed the rope and said: “Remember, you laughed, you didn’t think that I could do you any good, but now you see, good can come from a mouse.”

VARYA AND CHISH

L. N. Tolstoy


Varya had a siskin. The siskin lived in a cage and never sang. Varya came to the siskin. - “It’s time for you, little siskin, to sing.” - “Let me go free, in freedom I will sing all day long.”

THE OLD MAN AND THE APPLE TREES

L. N. Tolstoy


The old man was planting apple trees. They told him: “Why do you need apple trees? It will take a long time to wait for fruit from these apple trees, and you will not eat apples from them.” The old man said: “I won’t eat, others will eat, they will thank me.”

OLD GRANDFATHER AND GRANDSON

L. N. Tolstoy


Grandfather became very old. His legs did not walk, his eyes did not see, his ears did not hear, he had no teeth. And when he ate, it flowed backwards from his mouth. His son and daughter-in-law stopped sitting him at the table and let him dine at the stove. They brought him lunch in a cup. He wanted to move it, but he dropped it and broke it. The daughter-in-law began to scold the old man for ruining everything in the house and breaking cups, and said that now she would give him dinner in a basin. The old man just sighed and said nothing.
Once a man and his wife are sitting at home and watching - their little son is playing on the floor with planks - working out something. The father asked: “What are you doing this, Misha?” And Misha says: “It’s me, father, who is making the basin. When you and your mother are old, so that I can feed you from the basin.”

"Blue Leaves"

V.A. Oseeva

A story for children about friendship

Katya had two green pencils. And Lena has none. So Lena asks Katya:

Give me a green pencil. And Katya says:

I'll ask my mom.

The next day both girls come to school. Lena asks:

Did your mom allow it?

And Katya sighed and said:

Mom allowed it, but I didn’t ask my brother.

Well, ask your brother again,” says Lena.

Katya arrives the next day.

Well, did your brother allow it? - Lena asks.

My brother allowed me, but I'm afraid you'll break your pencil.

“I’m careful,” says Lena. “Look,” says Katya, “don’t fix it, don’t press hard, don’t put it in your mouth.” Don't draw too much.

“I just need to draw leaves on the trees and green grass,” says Lena.

“That’s a lot,” says Katya, and her eyebrows frown. And she made a dissatisfied face.

Lena looked at her and walked away. I didn't take a pencil. Katya was surprised and ran after her:

Well, what are you doing? Take it!

No need,” Lena answers. During the lesson the teacher asks:

Why, Lenochka, are the leaves on your trees blue?

There is no green pencil.

Why didn't you take it from your girlfriend?

Lena is silent. And Katya blushed like a lobster and said:

I gave it to her, but she doesn’t take it.

The teacher looked at both:

You have to give so that you can take.

"How Masha became big"

E. Permyak

Little Masha really wanted to grow up. Very. But she didn’t know how to do it. I tried everything. And I walked in my mother’s shoes. And she was sitting in my grandmother’s hood. And she did her hair like Aunt Katya’s. And I tried on beads. And she put the watch on her hand. Nothing worked. They just laughed at her and made fun of her. One day Masha decided to sweep the floor. And swept it. Yes, she swept it so well that even my mother was surprised:

Mashenka! Are you really getting big with us?

And when Masha washed the dishes clean and wiped them dry, then not only mother, but also father was surprised. He was surprised and said to everyone at the table:

We didn’t even notice how Maria grew up with us. He not only sweeps the floor, but also washes the dishes.

Now everyone calls little Masha big. And she feels like an adult, although she walks around in her tiny shoes and short dress. No hairstyle. No beads. No watch. Apparently, they are not the ones who make little ones big.

"Good"

V.A. Oseeva

Yura woke up in the morning. I looked out the window. The sun is shining. It's a good day. And the boy wanted to do something good himself.

So he sits and thinks: “What if my little sister was drowning, and I would save her!”

And my sister is right here:

Take a walk with me, Yura!

Go away, don't stop me from thinking! My little sister was offended and walked away. And Yura thinks: “If only wolves attacked the nanny, and I would shoot them!”

And the nanny is right there:

Put away the dishes, Yurochka.

Clean it yourself - I have no time!

The nanny shook her head. And Yura thinks again: “If only Trezorka fell into the well, and I would pull him out!”

And Trezorka is right there. His tail wags: “Give me a drink, Yura!”

Go away! Don't bother thinking! Trezorka closed his mouth and climbed into the bushes.

And Yura went to his mother:

What good thing could I do? Mom stroked Yura’s head:

Take a walk with your sister, help the nanny put away the dishes, give Trezor some water.

"Kitty"

L.N. Tolstoy

There were brother and sister - Vasya and Katya; and they had a cat. In the spring the cat disappeared. The children looked for her everywhere, but could not find her. One day they were playing near the barn and heard someone meowing in thin voices overhead. Vasya climbed the ladder under the roof of the barn. And Katya stood and kept asking:

Found? Found?

But Vasya did not answer her. Finally Vasya shouted to her:

Found! Our cat... and she has kittens; so wonderful; come here quickly.

Katya ran home, took out milk and brought it to the cat. There were five kittens. When they grew a little and began to crawl out from under the corner where they had hatched, the children chose one kitten, gray with white paws, and brought it into the house. The mother gave away all the other kittens, but left this one to the children. The children fed him, played with him and took him to bed.

One day the children went to play on the road and took a kitten with them. The wind moved the straw along the road, and the kitten played with the straw, and the children rejoiced at him. Then they found sorrel near the road, went to collect it and forgot about the kitten. Suddenly they heard someone shouting loudly:

"Back, back!" - and they saw that the hunter was galloping, and in front of him two dogs saw a kitten and wanted to grab it. And the kitten, stupid, instead of running, sat down to the ground, hunched its back and looked at the dogs. Katya was scared of the dogs, screamed and ran away from them. And Vasya, as best he could, ran towards the kitten and at the same time as the dogs ran up to it. The dogs wanted to grab the kitten, but Vasya fell with his stomach on the kitten and blocked it from the dogs. The hunter jumped up and drove the dogs away, and Vasya brought the kitten home and never took it with him into the field again.

"How Wolves Teach Their Children"

Lev Tolstoy

I was walking along the road and heard a scream behind me. The shepherd boy shouted. He ran across the field and pointed at someone. I looked and saw two wolves running across the field: one seasoned, the other young. The young man carried a slaughtered lamb on his back and held its leg with his teeth. The seasoned wolf ran behind. When I saw the wolves, I and the shepherd ran after them, and we began to scream. Men with dogs came running to our cry.

As soon as the old wolf saw the dogs and people, he ran up to the young one, snatched the lamb from him, threw it on his back, and both wolves ran faster and disappeared from sight. Then the boy began to tell how it happened: a large wolf jumped out of the ravine, grabbed the lamb, killed it and carried it away.

A wolf cub ran out and rushed to the lamb. The old man gave the lamb to the young wolf to carry, and he ran lightly next to him. Only when trouble came did the old man leave his studies and take the lamb himself.