Zayushkin's hut is a Russian folk tale. Fairy tale bast hut read text online, free download Author hare hut

Russian folk tale Fox and Hare” in the retelling of Vladimir Dahl.

Once upon a time there was a little gray Bunny on the field, but there lived a Little Fox-sister.
That's how the frosts went, Bunny began to shed, and when the cold winter came, with a blizzard and snowdrifts, Bunny turned white from the cold, and he decided to build a hut for himself: he dragged luboks and let's fence the hut. This Liska saw and said:
- You, little one, what are you doing?
- You see, I'm building a hut from the cold.
“Look, how quick-witted,” thought the Fox, “let me build a hut - only not a popular house, but chambers, a crystal palace!” So she began to carry ice and lay a hut. Both huts ripened at once, and our animals began to live with their homes.

Liska looks into the icy window and chuckles at the Bunny: “Look, black-footed, what a shack he made! Whether it’s my business: both clean and bright - neither give nor take the crystal palace!

Everything was fine for the fox in the winter, but as spring came after winter, and the snow began to drive away, warm the earth, then Liskin's palace melted and ran downhill with water. How can Liska be without a home? Here she ambushed when Zaika came out of his hut for a walk, snow grass, plucked rabbit cabbage, crept into Zaika's hut and climbed onto the floor.

Bunny came, pushed through the door - it was locked. He waited a little and started knocking again.
- Who's there? Lisa screamed in a thick voice.
- It's me, the owner, the gray Bunny, let me go, Fox.
“Get out, I won’t let you in,” Lisa answered.
Zayka waited and said:
- Enough, Lisonka, joking, let me go, I really want to sleep.
And Lisa replied:
- Wait, oblique, that's how I jump out, but jump out, I'll go shake you, only shreds will fly in the wind!

Bunny cried and went where his eyes look. He met a gray wolf.
- Great, Bunny, what are you crying about, what are you grieving about?
- But how can I not grieve, not grieve: I had a bast hut, Fox had an icy one. The fox hut melted, the water left, she captured mine, and does not let me, the owner!
- But wait, - said the Wolf, - we will kick her out!
- Hardly, Volchenka, we will drive out, she firmly sat down!
- I'm not me, if I don't kick out the Fox! Wolf growled.
So the Bunny was delighted and went with the Wolf to chase the Fox. They came.
- Hey, Lisa Patrikeevna, get out of someone else's hut! cried the Wolf.
And the fox from the hut answered him:
- Wait, that's how I'll get off the stove, but I'll jump out, but I'll jump out, but I'll go to beat you, so only shreds will fly in the wind!
- Oh, oh, how angry! - grumbled the Wolf, tucked his tail and ran into the forest, and the Bunny was left crying in the field.

Bull is coming.
- Great, Bunny, what are you grieving about, what are you crying about?
- But how can I not grieve, how not to grieve: I had a bast hut, Fox had an icy one. The fox hut melted, she captured mine, and now she doesn’t let me, the owner, go home!
- But wait, - said the Bull, - we will drive her out.
- No, Bychenka, it’s unlikely to drive her out, she sat down firmly, the Wolf already drove her - he didn’t kick her out, and you, Bull, can’t be kicked out!
“I’m not me, if I don’t kick him out,” the Bull murmured.
The Bunny was delighted and went with the Bull to survive the Fox. They came.
- Hey, Lisa Patrikeevna, get out of someone else's hut! murmured the Bull.
And Lisa answered him:
- Wait, that's how I get off the stove, but I'll go and beat you, the Bull, so only shreds will fly in the wind!
- Oh, oh, how angry! - mumbled the Bull, threw back his head and let's run away.

The bunny sat down near the hummock and began to cry.
Here comes the Mishka-Bear and says:
- Great, oblique, what are you grieving about, what are you crying about?
- And how can I not grieve, how not to grieve: I had a bast hut, and Fox had an icy one. The fox hut has melted, it has captured mine, and it does not let me, the owner, go home!
- But wait, - said the Bear, - we will kick her out!
- No, Mikhailo Potapych, it is unlikely to expel her, she sat down firmly. The wolf drove - did not drive out. The bull drove - didn’t drive out, and you can’t drive out!
- I'm not me, - the Bear roared, - if the Fox does not survive!
So the Bunny was delighted and went, bouncing, to drive the Fox home with the Bear. They came.
- Hey, Lisa Patrikeevna, - the Bear roared, - get out of someone else's hut!
And Lisa answered him:
- Wait, Mikhailo Potapych, that's how I'll get off the stove, but I'll jump out, but I'll jump, but I'll go and beat you, clubfoot, so only shreds will fly in the wind!
- Wow, what a fierce! - the Bear roared, and he started running in a rut.

How to be a hare? He began to beg the Fox, but the Fox does not lead with his ear. So Bunny cried and went wherever his eyes looked and met a kochet, a red Rooster, with a saber on his shoulder.
- Great, Bunny, how are you doing, what are you grieving about, what are you crying about?
- And how can I not grieve, how not to grieve, if they are driven from their native ashes? I had a bast hut, and the Fox had an icy one. The fox hut melted away, she occupied mine, and does not let me, the owner, go home!
“But wait,” said the Rooster, “we will kick her out!”
- It is unlikely, Petenka, you should be kicked out, she sat down painfully hard! The Wolf drove her - did not kick her out, the Bull drove her - did not kick her out, the Bear drove her - did not kick her out, where can you control it!
- Let's try, - said the Cockerel and went with the Hare to drive out the fox. How did they come to the hut. The rooster sang:

There is a kochet on his heels,
Carries a saber on his shoulders
Wants to kill Liska,
Sew a hat for yourself
Come out, Lisa, have pity on yourself!

As Lisa heard a threat to Petukhov, she was frightened, and she says:
- Wait, Cockerel, golden comb, silk beard!
And the Rooster cries:
- Cuckoo, I'll chop it all up!
Here the Fox asks in a thin, oily voice:
- Petenka, Cockerel, have pity on the old bones, let me put on a fur coat!
And the Rooster, standing at the door, know yourself shouting:

There is a kochet on his heels,
Carries a saber on his shoulders
Wants to kill Liska,
Sew a hat for yourself
Come out, Lisa, have pity on yourself!

Nothing to do, nowhere to go to Lisa: she opened the door, and jumped out. And the Rooster settled with the Bunny in his hut, and they began to live, to be, and to save up good.

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 - didn’t kick out, and you can’t kick it 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.

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    Zaikin's hut - Russian folk tale

    Zaikin's hut is a fairy tale about how a cunning fox took away a house from a hare and no one could drive her out of a warm house. However, the cockerel found a way to cope with an impossible task ...

    Zaikin's hut read

    Once upon a time there lived a fox and a hare in the forest. They lived not far from each other. Autumn came. It became cold in the forest. They decided to build huts for the winter. The chanterelle built herself a hut from loose snow, and the bunny built herself from loose sand. They overwintered in new huts. Spring has come, the sun has warmed. The fox's hut has melted, but the zaikin's is standing as it was.
    The fox came to the bunny's hut, drove out the bunny, and she herself remained in his hut.

    The hare went out of his yard, sat down under a birch and cries.

    The wolf is coming. He sees the bunny crying.

    Why are you crying bunny? - asks the wolf.

    How can I, a bunny, not cry? We lived with the fox close to each other. We built ourselves huts: I - from loose sand, and she - from loose snow. Spring has come. Her hut has melted, but mine stands as it stood. A fox came, kicked me out of my hut, and stayed in it to live. Here I sit and cry.

    They went. They came. The wolf stood on the threshold of the hare's hut and shouted at the fox:

    Why did you climb into someone else's hut? Get down, fox, from the stove, otherwise I'll throw it off, beat your shoulders. The fox was not afraid, answers the wolf:

    Oh, wolf, beware: my tail is like a rod, - as I give, so is death to you here.

    The wolf got scared and ran away. And left the bunny. The hare sat down again under the birch and wept bitterly.

    A bear is walking through the forest. He sees - a bunny sits under a birch and cries.

    Why are you crying bunny? - asks the bear.

    How can I, a bunny, not cry? We lived with the fox close to each other. We built ourselves huts: I - from loose sand, and she - from loose snow. Spring has come. Her hut has melted, but mine stands as it stood. A fox came, kicked me out of my hut and stayed there to live. So here I sit and cry.

    Don't cry, bunny. Let's go, I'll help you, I'll drive the fox out of your hut.

    They went. They came. The bear stood on the threshold of the hare's hut and shouted at the fox:

    Why did you take the hut from the bunny? Get down, fox, from the stove, otherwise I'll throw it off, beat your shoulders.

    The fox was not afraid, he answered the bear:

    Oh, bear, beware: my tail is like a rod - as I give, so is death to you here.

    The bear was frightened and ran away and left the bunny alone.


    Again the hare went out of his yard, sat down under the birch and wept bitterly. Suddenly he sees - a rooster is walking through the forest. I saw a bunny, came up and asked:

    Why are you crying bunny?

    But how can I, bunny, not cry? We lived with the fox close to each other. We built ourselves huts: I - from loose sand, and she - from loose snow. Spring has come. Her hut has melted, but mine stands as it stood. A fox came, kicked me out of my hut and stayed there to live. Here I sit and cry.

    Do not cry, bunny, I will drive the fox out of your hut.

    Oh, petenka, - the bunny cries, - where do you kick her out? The wolf drove - did not drive out. The bear drove - did not drive out.

    And here I am kicking it out. Come on, says the rooster. Went.


    A rooster entered the hut, stood on the threshold, crowed, and then screamed:

    I am a rooster

    I am a babbler,

    On short legs

    On high heels.

    I carry a scythe on my shoulder,

    I'll take the fox's head off.

    And the fox lies and says:

    Oh, rooster, beware: my tail is like a rod, - as I give, so is death to you here.

    The cockerel jumped from the threshold into the hut and again shouts:

    I am a rooster

    I am a babbler,

    On short legs

    On high heels.

    I carry a scythe on my shoulder,

    I'll take the fox's head off.

    And - jump on the stove to the fox. He pecked the fox in the back. How the fox jumped up and how it ran out of the hare's hut, and the hare slammed the doors behind her.


    And he remained to live in his hut with a cockerel.

    (Ill. Yu.Vasnetsov)

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    Once upon a time there lived a fox and a hare. The fox has an icy hut, and the hare has a bast hut. Here is the fox teasing the hare:

    - My hut is light, and yours is dark! Mine is light, yours is dark!

    Summer has come, the fox's hut has melted. Fox and asks for a hare:

    - Let me go, hare, at least to your yard!

    - No, fox, I won’t let you in - why did you tease?

    The fox began to beg more. The hare let her into his yard.

    The next day, the fox asks again:

    - Let me, hare, on the porch.

    Begged, begged the fox.

    The hare agreed and put the fox on the porch.

    On the third day, the fox asks again:

    - Let me go, hare, into the hut.

    “No, I won’t let you in,” why did you tease?

    She begged, she begged, the hare let her into the hut. The fox is sitting on the bench, and the bunny is on the stove.

    On the fourth day, the fox asks again:

    - Zainka, zainka, let me on the stove to your place!

    “No, I won’t let you in,” why did you tease?

    She asked, the fox asked, and begged, - the hare put her on the stove.

    A day or two passed, the fox began to drive the hare out of the hut:

    "Get out, scythe!" I don't want to live with you!

    So she kicked out.

    The hare sits and cries, grieves, wipes tears with its paws. Running past the dog

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

    How can I not cry? I had a bast hut, and the fox had an ice hut. Spring has come, the fox's hut has melted. The fox asked me to come, but she kicked me out.

    “Don’t cry, bunny,” the dogs say. - We are chasing her.

    - No, don't kick me out!

    - No, let's get out!

    Approached the hut:

    — Tyaf-tyaf-tyaf! Go, fox, get out!

    And she told them from the oven:

    - How do I get out?

    How do I jump out

    Shreds will go

    Through the alleys!

    The dogs got scared and ran away.

    Again the bunny sits and cries. A wolf is walking by

    - What are you crying about, bunny?

    - How can I, gray wolf, not cry? I had a bast hut, and the fox had an ice hut. Spring has come, the fox's hut has melted. The fox asked me to come, but she kicked me out.

    - Don't cry, bunny, - says the wolf, - so I'm chasing her.

    - No, you won't. They drove the dogs - they didn’t kick them out, and you won’t kick them out.

    - No, I'll take it out.

    - Uyyy ... uyyy ... Go, fox, get out!

    And she from the oven:

    - How do I get out?

    How do I jump out

    Shreds will go

    Through the alleys!

    The wolf got scared and ran away.

    Here the hare sits and cries again.

    An old bear is coming

    - What are you crying about, bunny?

    - How can I, bear, not cry? I had a bast hut, and the fox had an ice hut. Spring has come, the fox's hut has melted. The fox asked me to come, but she kicked me out.

    - Don't cry, bunny, - says the bear, - I'm chasing her.

    - No, you won't. The dogs drove, drove - did not drive out, the gray wolf drove, drove - did not drive out. And you don't you drive.

    - No, I'll take it out.

    The bear went to the hut and growled:

    - Rrr... rrr. Get out, fox, get out!

    And she from the oven:

    - How do I get out?

    How do I jump out

    Shreds will go

    Through the alleys!

    The bear got scared and left.

    Again the hare sits and cries. A rooster is coming, carrying a scythe.

    - Ku-ka-river! Zainka, what are you crying about?

    - How can I, Petenka, not cry? I had a bast hut, and the fox had an ice hut. Spring has come, the fox's hut has melted. The fox asked me to come, but she kicked me out.

    - Don't worry, bunny, I'll kick the fox out for you.

    - No, you won't. The dogs drove, drove - not you drove, the gray wolf drove, drove - did not drive out, the old honey drove, drove - did not drive out. And you won't get kicked out.

    - No, I'll take it out.

    The rooster went to the hut:

    - Ku-ka-river!

    I walk on my feet

    In red boots

    I carry a scythe on my shoulders:

    I want to kill the fox.

    Went, fox, from the stove!

    The fox heard, got scared and said:

    - I'm getting dressed...

    Rooster again:

    - Ku-ka-river!

    I walk on my feet

    In red boots

    I carry a scythe on my shoulders:

    I want to kill the fox.

    Went, fox, from the stove!

    And the fox says:

    I put on a coat...

    Rooster for the third time:

    - Ku-ka-river!

    I walk on my feet

    In red boots

    I carry a scythe on my shoulders:

    I want to kill the fox.

    Went, fox, from the stove!

    The fox was frightened, jumped off the stove - yes, run away. And the hare and the rooster began to live and live.

    Questions to discuss with children

    What hut did the hare and the fox build? Which hut was warmer?

    What happened to the fox's ice hut in the summer?

    What did the fox hare ask for?

    Did the fox do well by driving the hare out of the house?

    Who tried to help the bunny? Why couldn't such big animals help the little bunny?

    What did the fox answer to the dog, wolf and bear?

    Who helped the bunny in trouble? Why did the little rooster manage to defeat the fox?