The hare had a bast hut. Fairy tale bast hut read text online, free download


ZAYKINA'S HUT.

(Russian folktale)

A small script (sketch) for kindergarten, where the children themselves will play.

CHARACTERS:

STORYTELLER
HARE
FOX
DOG
WOLF
BEAR
ROOSTER

(Music.)

STORYTOR: Once upon a time there was a Fox and a Hare. The Fox had an ice hut, and the Hare had a bast. The red spring has come - the Fox's hut has melted, but the Hare is still standing. So the Fox asked the Hare to spend the night, and kicked him out of the hut. Dear Bunny is walking and crying. The dog is facing him.

(Music. The curtain opens. The backdrop is a forest. There is a Hare's hut on the stage (the hut can be drawn and fixed on something, or you can put a screen and attach a drawn hut to its walls) A Hare is walking along the stage, he is crying. Because of the stage Dog appears.

DOG: Wow! What are you, Bunny, crying?



DOG: Don't cry, bunny! I will help your grief!

STORYTELLER: They went to Zaikin's hut ...

(Dog and Hare approach the hut.)

DOG: Wow! Go, Lisa, get out!

STORYTOR: And the Fox is from the stove ...

narrator: The dog got scared and ran away...

(The dog runs offstage.)

STORYTELLER: The Bunny is walking again, crying. I will meet the wolf.

(The bunny walks across the stage, cries. The Wolf comes out from behind the stage.)

WOLF: What are you crying about, Bunny?

HARE: How can I not cry?
I had a bast hut, and Lisa had an icy one. Spring has come, her hut has melted. That-
When she asked me to spend the night with me, she kicked me out.

WOLF: Don't cry, I'll help your grief!

HARE: No, you can't help!
The dog drove - it didn’t kick out, and you can’t kick it out!

WOLF: No, I'll kick you out!

STORYTOR: They went to the hut. The wolf screams...

(Wolf and Hare approach the hut.)

WOLF: Go, Fox, get out!

STORYTOR: And the Fox is from the stove ...

STORYTOR: The wolf was frightened and ran away ...

(The wolf runs offstage.)

STORYTELLER: The Bunny is coming again, crying. Bear is facing him.

(The hare walks across the stage, cries. The Bear appears from behind the stage.)

BEAR: Why are you crying, Bunny?

HARE: How can I not cry?
I had a bast hut, and Lisa had an icy one. Spring has come, her hut has melted. That-
When she asked me to spend the night with me, she kicked me out.

BEAR: Let's go to the Fox, I'll help your grief!

HARE: No, Bear, you can't help!
The dog drove - did not drive out, the Wolf drove - did not drive out, and you will not be kicked out!

BEAR: And I'll kick you out!

STORYTOR: They approached the hut. The bear is howling...

(Bear and Hare approach the hut.)

BEAR: Go, Fox, get out!

STORYTOR: And the Fox is from the stove ...

STORYTOR: The bear was frightened and ran away ...

(The bear runs offstage.)

STORYTELLER: Again the Bunny is walking along the road, crying more than ever. He is met by a Rooster with a scythe.

(The hare walks around the stage, cries. A Rooster appears from behind the stage with a scythe on his shoulders (a scythe can be made).)

COCK: Cook-re-coo!
What are you crying about, Bunny?

HARE: How can I not cry?
I had a bast hut, and Lisa had an icy one. Spring has come, her hut has melted. That-
When she asked me to spend the night with me, she kicked me out.

COCK: Let's go, I'll help your grief!

HARE: No, Rooster, you can't help!
The dog drove - did not drive out, the Wolf drove - did not drive out, the Bear drove - did not drive out, and you will not be kicked out
drive!

COCK: No, I'll kick you out! Let's go to Lisa!

STORYTOR: They went to the hut. The rooster stomped its paws, flapped its wings ...

(The Hare and the Rooster approach the hut. The Rooster stamps his feet, flaps his wings with his hands.)

COCK: Cook-re-coo!
I'm on my heels!
I carry a scythe on my shoulders!
I want to hit Lisa!
Get off the Fox from the oven!

STORYTELLER: The Fox heard, got scared and says ...

COCK: Cook-re-coo!
I'm on my heels!
I carry a scythe on my shoulders!
I want to hit Lisa!
Get off the Fox from the oven!

COCK: Cook-re-coo!
I'm on my heels!
I carry a scythe on my shoulders!
I want to hit Lisa!
Get off the Fox from the oven!

(The rooster stamps its feet, flaps its wings and waves its scythe.)

STORYTELLER: The rooster stomps its paws, flaps its wings, waves its scythe ... The Fox was frightened, jumped out of the hut and ran away.

(The fox leaves the hut (you can leave the hut) and runs offstage. The Hare and the Rooster enter the hut.)

STORYTOR: Then the Rooster and the Hare went into the hut and began to live and live there since then, and the Fox did not appear in those places anymore.

(Music. The curtain closes.)

END OF THE PERFORMANCE.

There lived a fox and a hare. And the fox had an icy hut, and the hare had a bast.
Spring has come and the fox's hut has melted, but the hare's is as before.

Then the fox came to the hare and asked him to spend the night, he let her in, and she took him and drove him out of her own hut. A hare walks through the forest and cries bitterly. Dogs running towards him:

Woof woof woof! Why are you crying bunny?
- How can I not cry? I had a bast hut, and the fox had an ice hut. In the spring, her hut melted away. The fox came to me and asked to spend the night, and she herself kicked me out.

Do not cry, oblique! We will help your grief. Now let's go and drive the fox away!

They went to the hare hut. How dogs bark:
- Woof woof woof! Get out, fox, get out!

And the fox answers them from the stove:

The dogs got scared and ran away.

Again the hare walks through the forest and cries. Towards him a wolf:
- Why are you crying, hare?

How can I not cry? I had a bast hut, and the fox had an ice hut. She asked me to spend the night, and she kicked me out.
- Don't worry, I'll help you.
- No, wolf, you will not help. The dogs drove - they didn’t drive away, and you can’t drive away.
- No, I'll drive! Went!

They approached the hut. The wolf howls:
- Wu-u-u, get out, fox, get out!

And the fox answers them from the stove:
- As I jump out, as I jump out, shreds will go along the back streets!

The wolf got scared and ran back into the forest.

The hare comes again and cries bitterly. Towards him a bear:
- What are you crying about, hare?

How can I not cry? I had a bast hut, and the fox had an ice hut. She asked me to spend the night, but she kicked me out.
- Do not cry, oblique, I will help you.
- You can't, Mikhailo Potapych. The dogs drove - they didn’t drive out, the wolf drove - they didn’t drive out, and you won’t drive out.
- We'll see! Well, let's go!

Once upon a time there lived a fox and a hare. The fox had an icy hut, the hare had a bast.

The red spring has come - the fox's hut has melted, and the hare's is in the old way. So the fox asked him to spend the night, and kicked him out of the hut. There is an expensive bunny, crying. A dog meets him:

— Tyaf, tyaf, tyaf! What, bunny, are you crying?

How can I not cry? I had a bast hut, and the fox had an icy one. She asked me to spend the night, and she kicked me out.

Don't cry, bunny! I will help your grief.

They approached the hut. The dog wandered:
— Tyaf, tyaf, tyaf! Come on, fox, get out!

And the fox to them from the oven:


The dog got scared and ran away.

The bunny is walking the road again, crying. A bear meets him:
“What are you crying about, bunny?”



Don't cry, I'll help your grief.

- No, you can't. The dog drove - did not drive out, and you can not drive out.

- No, I'll kick you out!

They approached the hut. The bear screams:
- Go fox, get out!

And the fox to them from the oven:
- As soon as I jump out, as soon as I jump out, shreds will go along the back streets!

The bear got scared and ran away.

The bunny is coming again. A bull meets him:
- What, bunny, are you crying?

How can I not cry? I had a bast hut, and the fox had an icy one. She asked to spend the night, and she kicked me out.



- No, bull, you will not help. The dog drove - didn’t drive out, the bear drove - didn’t drive out, and you won’t drive out.

- No, I'll kick you out!

They approached the hut. The bull roared:
- Come on, fox, get out!

And the fox to them from the oven:
- As soon as I jump out, as soon as I jump out, shreds will go along the back streets!

The bull got scared and ran away.

The bunny is walking again dear, crying more than ever. A rooster with a scythe meets him:
- Ku-ka-river! What are you crying about, bunny?

How can I not cry? I had a bast hut, and the fox had an icy one. She asked to spend the night, and she kicked me out.

- Come on, I'll help your grief.

- No, rooster, you will not help. The dog drove - didn’t drive out, the bear drove - didn’t drive out, the bull drove - didn’t drive out, and you won’t drive out.

- No, I'll kick you out!

They approached the hut. The rooster stamped its paws, beat its wings:
Ku-ka-re-ku!
I walk on my heels
I carry a scythe on my shoulders,
I want to kill the fox

Get down, fox, from the stove,
Come on, fox, get out!


The fox heard, got scared and said:
- I wear...

Rooster again:

Ku-ka-re-ku!
I walk on my heels
I carry a scythe on my shoulders,
I want to kill the fox

Get down, fox, from the stove,
Come on, fox, get out!

Lisa says again:

- I'm getting dressed...

Rooster for the third time:
Ku-ka-re-ku!
I walk on my heels
I carry a scythe on my shoulders,
I want to kill the fox
Get down, fox, from the stove,
Come on, fox, get out!

The fox ran out without memory, the rooster killed her with a scythe. And they began to live with the bunny in a bast hut.

Once upon a time there lived a fox and a hare. The fox had an icy hut, the hare had a bast.

The red spring has come - the fox's hut has melted, and the hare's is in the old way.

So the fox asked him to spend the night, and kicked him out of the hut. There is an expensive bunny, crying. A dog meets him:

— Tyaf, tyaf, tyaf! What, bunny, are you crying?

How can I not cry? I had a bast hut, and the fox had an icy one. She asked me to spend the night, and she kicked me out.

Don't cry, bunny! I will help your grief.

They approached the hut. The dog wandered:

— Tyaf, tyaf, tyaf! Come on, fox, get out!

And the fox to them from the oven:

The dog got scared and ran away.

The bunny is walking the road again, crying. A bear meets him:

“What are you crying about, bunny?”

Don't cry, I'll help your grief.

- No, you can't. The dog drove - did not drive out, and you can not drive out.

- No, I'll kick you out!

They approached the hut. The bear screams:

- Come on, fox, get out!

And the fox to them from the oven:

- As soon as I jump out, as soon as I jump out, shreds will go along the back streets!

The bear got scared and ran away.

The bunny is coming again. A bull meets him:

- What, bunny, are you crying?

How can I not cry? I had a bast hut, and the fox had an icy one. She asked to spend the night, and she kicked me out.

- No, bull, you will not help. The dog drove - didn’t drive out, the bear drove - didn’t drive out, and you won’t drive out.

- No, I'll kick you out!

They approached the hut. The bull roared:

- Come on, fox, get out!

And the fox to them from the oven:

- As soon as I jump out, as soon as I jump out, shreds will go along the back streets!

The bull got scared and ran away.

The bunny is walking again dear, crying more than ever. A rooster with a scythe meets him:

- Ku-ka-river! What are you crying about, bunny?

How can I not cry? I had a bast hut, and the fox had an icy one. She asked to spend the night, and she kicked me out.

- Come on, I'll help your grief.

- No, rooster, you will not help. The dog drove - didn’t drive out, the bear drove - didn’t drive out, the bull drove - didn’t drive out, and you won’t drive out.

- No, I'll kick you out!

They approached the hut. The rooster stamped its paws, beat its wings:

— Ku-ka-re-ku! I walk on my heels

I carry a scythe on my shoulders,

I want to kill the fox

Get down, fox, from the stove,

Come on, fox, get out!

The fox heard, got scared and said:

- I wear...

Rooster again:

— Ku-ka-re-ku! I walk on my heels

I carry a scythe on my shoulders,

I want to kill the fox

Get down, fox, from the stove,

Come on, fox, get out!

Lisa says again:

- I'm getting dressed...

Rooster for the third time:

— Ku-ka-re-ku! I walk on my heels

I carry a scythe on my shoulders,

I want to kill the fox

Get down, fox, from the stove,

Come on, fox, get out!

The fox ran out without memory, the rooster killed her with a scythe.

And they began to live with the bunny in a bast hut.

The editors of Pravmir compiled a list of words from children's fairy tales for Children's Day, which seem well-known only at first glance.

CHICKEN LEGS

Have you ever wondered why chicken legs and not chicken legs? The fact is that they have a very distant relation to chickens. In the dictionary of V.I.Dal it is said that “kur” is the rafters on peasant huts. In swampy places, huts were built precisely on such rafters, so that it would not be very damp and the tree would not rot. There is another version: the name “chicken legs” comes from “chicken”, i.e. fumigated with smoke, pillars on which the Slavs put a “hut of death” - a small log house with the ashes of the deceased inside (such a funeral rite existed among the ancient Slavs back in the 6th - 9th centuries). The second version is supported by the fact that in the hut on chicken legs everything - Baba Yaga still lives, which is located on the border of two worlds: the real and the other world.

BAT hut

What is it made of? From the bast. The word "bast" has three meanings, the Big Explanatory Dictionary, edited by A.S. Kuznetsov, tells us.

1. The fibrous tissue of plants, through which the movement of organic substances occurs.

2. The inner part of the bark of young deciduous trees (mainly lindens);

a piece, a strip of such bark (used for making ropes, baskets, weaving matting, etc.);

bast. Kick your lips. collected Bast box.

3. Spec. Fibrous fabric of flax, hemp, etc., used for dressing yarn.< Лубовый, -ая, -ое. Л-ые волокна. Лубок; Лубяной (см.).

That is, a bast hut is one that is made of bark.

FINIST - CLEAR FALCON

Who is Finist and where did such a name come from? Folklorists claim that the name Finist is a distorted Greek "phoenix" - a magical bird reborn from the ashes. In Russia, he turned first into a “finis”, and then into a “finist”. But why then Falcon? This name, most likely, arose under the influence of the metaphorical image of the falcon - the groom from Russian wedding songs.

Kashchey

Everything seems to be clear with this character, but there is one question. How is it correct: Kashchei or Koschei? If you look in the dictionaries, you can make sure that both options are correct. But then another question arises: what word is this name derived from? The author of the etymological dictionary, Max Vasmer, connects the word "koschey" as a name and as the name of a thin person with the word "bone". Hence, by the way, the idea of ​​his thinness, exhaustion, which is combined with malice and greed. There are other words related and reflecting the essence of this character. For example, "kosh" - a purse, a basket, a box, a chest (over the gold in which Kashchei languishes, probably). And, of course, Kashchei is a blasphemer who performs some magical actions. A funny detail: in Vladimir Elistratov's "Dictionary of Russian Argo" there is the word "Koshcheevna" - this is how, according to the dictionary, they call an ugly, evil woman.

MIZGIR

Strange in its sound, unlike anything, the name that one of the Russian fairy tales is called, and also the name of one of the heroes of Ostrovsky's "Snow Maiden" - a merchant who falls in love with the Snow Maiden and forgets about his bride Kupava. Who is Mizgir? Mizgir is a spider, and dangerous, poisonous. Dahl reads:

Mizgir - m. east spider, flycatcher; | earthen, evil spider, tarantula; | baby, baby; weak, brainy; | novg. crybaby. If you kill Mizgir, you will come true forty sins. It is true that the mizgir is in the nets: the bumblebee will break through, and the fly will get stuck. Fear, midges, the honest gentleman, the fat mizgir! Confused that mizgir is in the nets.

POLKAN

It's hard to believe, but this seemingly Russian name has Italian roots! Vasmer's etymological dictionary indicates that the word comes from the Italian Pulicane - this is the name of the hero of the story about Bove. Polkan has nothing to do with a half-horse, Vasmer notes. However, the “semi-” element is still there. Pulicane is a half-dog, a dog-headed monster, a dog-hero. And the version about the half-horse appeared because the words cane (dog) and horse are similar in sound.

SUSEKI

Where did the word "suseki" come from, which had to be scraped in order to collect flour on Kolobok? Susek - the same as the bin; a fenced-off place in a granary or barn for pouring grain or flour. Fasmer's dictionary says that this word came from the verb "cut", "cut". That is, “su-” is something like an ancient prefix, and “sec” is a root.