Biographies Characteristics Analysis

You and I walked and found a casing. Boring Tales - Russian folk tale

There are a great many different fairy tales for children - funny stories, jokes, fairy tales about animals, boring fairy tales.
A boring tale is a tale in which the same piece of text is repeated many times.
Such a fairy tale is like a chain with a large number of repeating links, the number of which depends only on the will of the performer or listener. The links can be fastened together with the help of a special phrase “wouldn’t the fairy tale start over”, after which the fragment is repeated again and again. In some of the boring tales, the narrator asks a question, to which the listener must answer, which is used for the next repetition of the tale. The plot of the fairy tale does not develop, the connecting question causes only bewilderment and annoyance in the listener. Boring tales include the tale of the white bull and the tale of the priest and his dog.

Megillah. What is this story and where did it come from?
It was invented a long time ago by some parent who does not want to tell a bedtime story to his child. And since the child was excessively bothersome, the tale sounded something like this: - Shall I tell you a tale about a white bull? - Tell! - You say “tell”, but I say “tell”, but why not tell you a fairy tale about a white bull? - Don't tell me! You say “don’t tell”, but I say “don’t tell”, but why don’t you tell a fairy tale about a white bull ?.

Also, the same fragment of text repeated many times appears in the well-known monotonous sentence "buy an elephant" (the main idea is that no matter what the interlocutor says, he is eventually offered to buy an elephant).
Boring fairy tales, as a rule, are used in the upbringing of children; this is a kind of game for the development of the child's thinking, involving the search for a way out of the vicious circle of endless history.
Telling such a fairy tale, you develop memory, thinking, attention, and, of course, introduce the baby to Russian folk art.

Here are some examples of such stories:

Once upon a time there was a king Vatuta and the whole fairy tale is here. There is a gingerbread house, Decorated with raisins, Shines in the light of the moon. Candy door, Can't you tell from the end?..

A river flows, A bridge across the river, A sheep is on the bridge, The sheep has a tail, There is a bast on the tail, Tell me first? ..

The bear came to the ford, Yes, plop into the water! He's wet, wet, wet, he's kitty, kitty, kitty. Soaked, Vykis, Got out, Dried out, Stood on the deck - Plunged into the water ...;

Once upon a time there were two brothers, two brothers - a sandpiper and a crane. They mowed down a stack of hay and placed it among the Poles. Can't you tell the tale again from the end?

Let's go further.
We see the bridge
On the bridge the crow dries.
Grab her by the tail
Shast under the bridge -
Let her get wet!
Let's go further.
We see the bridge
A crow gets wet under the bridge.
Grab her by the tail
Shake it on the bridge -
Let her dry!
Let's go further...

Did we go with you?
- Let's go!
Did you find the boot?
- Found!
- Did I give it to you?
- Dal!
- Did you take it?
- Got it!
- Where is he?
- Who?
- Yes, not who, but what!
- What?
- Boot!
- Which?
- Well, like that! Did we go with you?
- Let's go!
Did you find the boot?
- Found

Can I tell you a story about an owl?
- Tell!
- Good! Listen, don't interrupt!
The owl flew
Funny head.
Here she flew, flew,
sat on a birch,
She turned her tail,
I looked around,
I sang a song
And flew again.
Here she flew, flew,
On the birch of the village
She turned her tail,
I looked around,
I sang a song
And flew again...
Should I say more?

Oak stands over the river.
On that oak sits a magpie -
looks into the river.
And the cancer got out of the water and crawls.
Here he climbs and crawls, climbs and crawls, and the magpie looks.
Here she looks, and the cancer crawls and creeps
Here he climbs and crawls, climbs and crawls. And the magpie is watching.
She looks, and looks, and looks. And cancer creeps and crawls ...
I WALKED SOMEONE across the bridge,
Look - the crow is WET.
I took the crow by the tail,
Put her on the bridge -
Let the crow DRY!
WALKED AGAIN I crossed the bridge,
Look - the crow Dries.
I took the crow by the tail,
Put her under the bridge -
Let the crow WET!
AGAIN I WALKED across the bridge,
Look - the crow is WET.
I took the crow by the tail,
Put her on the bridge -
Let the crow DRY!

I CAME TO THE BRIDGE AGAIN
Look - the crow Dries.
I took the crow by the tail,
Put her under the bridge -
Let the crow WET!

I CAME TO THE SAME BRIDGE
Look - the crow gets wet ...

A stuffed meow was sitting on a pipe,
The scarecrow meowed a song.
Scarecrow-meow with red-red mouth,
It tortured everyone with a terrible song.
All around the scarecrow is sad and sickening,
Because his song is about the fact that
A stuffed meowache sat on a pipe ...

Once upon a time we were friends
Cat and Workot.
They ate from the same table
Looked through the window from one angle,
They went for a walk from one porch. . .
Wouldn't you like to listen to the tale again from the end?

The dog was walking across the bridge
She tied her tail in the mud,
Pulled, pulled, stretched out the tail,
I just got my nose stuck in a swamp.
Pulled, pulled..

On the mountain - a hut,
An old woman lives in it.
Sitting on the stove
Chews rolls.
Here she stood
She took out a washcloth from behind the stove. . .
The old woman's bast is good!
Why not start the story from the beginning?

Can I tell you a story about a white bull?
- Yes.
Everyone says “yes”, and you want to tell a fairy tale about a white bull?
- tell
Everyone says "tell" ..etc. etc.

In some kingdom
In an unknown state
Not where we live
A marvelous thing happened
A wonderful miracle appeared:
An important turnip grew in the garden,
Every old woman praised:
one day
You don't go around.
The whole village ate half of that turnip for a month,
Barely got there.
The neighbors saw
They ate the other half for three weeks.
The rest was piled on the cart,
Dragged past the forest
The cart was broken.
A bear ran by - he was surprised,
Falling asleep with fear...
When he wakes up -
Then the story goes on!

Tell me a story.
- I'll tell you about the goose.
That's the whole story.

Once upon a time there was a Tsar Bubenets.
He wanted to build himself a new palace
They brought him wet boards,
They laid it on the sand to dry.
Dried, dried, dried.
They put it in the river and soaked it.
Again dried - dried up,
Soaked again - soaked!
This is how the boards will be ready,
Then we will take up this fairy tale again.
It won't be soon though:
It will be that year
When the goblin dies, -
And he hasn't gotten sick yet!

Once upon a time there were a sandpiper and a crane.
They mowed a stack of hay.
This story is from the end again. Etc.

Aunt Arina
cooked porridge,
Egor and Boris
They fought over porridge.
Washed, washed,
Start from the beginning!

There lived a king.
The king had a court
There was a stake in the yard
Washed on a stake.
Why not tell the story first?

At grandmother's hut
Burenka chewed grass,
She chewed, chewed - was silent.
I saw: on the fence-bast.
I saw a washcloth - mooed ...
Should I say about Burenka first?

Once upon a time there was a grandmother
Yes, by the river
Grandma wanted
Swim in the river.
She bought
Soap and wash.
This story is good
Start over...

Kutyr-Mutyr lived in the middle of the Polish,
He mowed himself a stack of hay.
A ram and a sheep came
Ate the whole stack of hay...
Can't you tell the tale again from the end?

A boring fairy tale refers to a type of fairy tale in which the same passage of text is repeated several times. In a fairy tale, this kind of plot development does not occur.

The product is like a chain with identical links. The links are fastened together by characteristic questions, expressions like “shouldn’t we start the fairy tale from the beginning”? And then there is a repetition of the passage.

The priest had a dog
He loved her.
She ate a piece of meat
He killed her.
Dug a hole, dug
He put the cross, wrote,
what:
The priest had a dog
etc.

Once upon a time there was a king Vatuta, that's the whole fairy tale here.

There is a gingerbread house,
decorated with raisins,
Shines in the light of the moon.
Candy door, Can't you tell everything from the end? ..

Let's go further.
We see the bridge
A crow gets wet under the bridge.
Grab her by the tail
Shast on the bridge -
Let her dry!
Let's go further.
We see the bridge
On the bridge the crow dries.
Grab her by the tail
Shake it under the bridge -
Let her get wet!
Let's go further...

Did we go with you?
- Let's go!
Did you find boots?
- Found!
Did I give them to you?
- I did!
- Did you take them?
- Got it!
- Where are they?
- Who?
- Yes, not who, but what!
- What?
- Boots!
- What kind?
- Well, such! Did we go with you?
- Let's go!
Did you find boots?
- Found

Can I tell you a story about an owl?
- Tell!
- Good! Listen to me, don't interrupt!
Somehow an owl flew -
Funny head.
Here she flew, flew,
perched on a branch,
She turned her tail,
I looked around,
I sang a song
And flew again.
Here she flew, flew,
perched on a branch
She turned her tail,
I looked around,
I sang a song
And flew again...
Should I say more?

A scarecrow sat on the roof,
The scarecrow meowed a song.
Scarecrow-meow with a dark red mouth,
It tormented everyone with a terrible song.
Everyone around from the scarecrow is sad and sick,
Because his song is about the fact that
A scarecrow-meowchel sat on the roof ...

There is a hut on the mountain,
An old woman lives in a hut.
She sits on the stove
And chews and chews kalachi.
But the old woman stood up
I got a washcloth from behind the stove ...
Well, the old woman's bast!
Shouldn't we start the story over?

In some kingdom
In an unknown state
Not where we live
A marvelous miracle appeared
A wonderful miracle happened:
An important turnip grew in the garden,
Each old woman praised:
You can't go around in one day.
The whole village ate half of that turnip for a month,
Barely finished it.
Neighbors saw it all
Three weeks the other half ate.
The rest of the turnips were piled on the cart,
Dragged past the forest
The cart was broken off from the cargo.
A bear ran - marveled,
Falling asleep with fear...
But when the bear wakes up -
Then the story will continue!

Once upon a time there was a Tsar Bubenets.
He planned to build a new palace
They brought him wet boards,
They laid the boards on the sand to dry.
They dried the boards, dried - dried up.
They put them in the river - soaked them.
Again the boards were dried - dried up,
They were soaked again - soaked!
As soon as the boards are ready,
Then we'll get back to the story.
It just won't happen any time soon:
It will happen in that year
When the goblin dies, -
And he hasn't fallen ill yet!

Grandma Arina
Cooked porridge,
Egor and Boris
Because of that porridge they fought.
Wash, wash,
Start over!

Baba Matryona has a hut
Burenka chewed grass,
She chewed grass - was silent.
I saw: on the fence-bast.
I saw a bast - groaned ...
Shouldn't I tell you about Burenka first?

Once upon a time there was a grandmother
Yes, by the river
Grandma wanted
Swim in the river.
Bought by grandma
Soap and wash.
Oh, and the story is good
Start over...

What are the characteristics of a boring fairy tale?
Cyclicity, repetitions, the movement of the plot in a circle. Characters perform the same actions, endlessly repeating.

Why are fairy tales called "boring"?
Let's first deal with the word "boring". To pester is to annoy, to bake, to cling. Boring - sticky, bothering with requests, depressing.

Boring tales were composed, among other things, so that the storyteller could fight off annoying listeners who demanded to tell another and another tale. But it was impossible to endlessly narrate. To contain his ardor, the narrator dragged on a boring tale. Everyone got tired of her - thus, the gatherings ended.

Boring Tales
Once upon a time there were two brothers

Once upon a time there were two brothers, two brothers - a sandpiper and a crane. They mowed down a stack of hay and placed it among the Poles. Can't you tell the tale again from the end?

There lived an old man

- There was an old man. I went to the mill to grind flour ...

- Well, you beckoned, but you don’t tell!

- If only he arrived, told, and he, maybe a week will pass!

The bear came to the ford


The bear came to the ford
Bultykh in the water!
He's already wet, wet, wet,
Already he is kitty, kitty, kitty,
Wet, vykis, got out, dried up.
I got up on the deck -

Bultykh in the water!
He's wet, wet, wet...

Did we go with you?


- Did we go with you?
- Let's go!
Did you find the boot?
– Found!
Did I give it to you?
- Dal!
- Did you take it?
- Got it!
“Where is he?”
- Who?
- Yes, not who, but what!
- What?
- Boot!
- Which?
- Well, like that! Did we go with you?
- Let's go!
Did you find the boot?
- Found...

Russian folk songs
"Larks, larks..."


Larks, larks,
Fly to us.
Bring us a warm summer
Take the cold winter away from us
We are tired of the cold winter
Hands, feet frostbitten.

"Sunshine, show yourself..."


Sunshine, show yourself
Red, gear up!
To year after year
gave us the weather
warm flyer,
Mushrooms in birch bark,
Berries in a basket
Green peas.

"Because of the forest, the dark forest..."


Because of the forest, the dark forest,
Is it because of the mountains, high mountains,
A flock of swans is flying
And the other is goose.
The swan lagged behind
What from a herd of swan,
The swan pestered
Like a herd to gray geese.
The geese began to pinch her,
And click the swan:
- Do not pinch, gray geese,
I did not fly to you myself,
The weather took me
What a great misfortune.

“Like thin ice…”


Like thin ice
A white snow fell.
A white snow fell.
Vanyushka-friend was driving.
Vanya drove, hurried,
From the goodness of the horse fell.
He fell, fell, lies -
No one runs to Vanya
Two girls saw
They ran straight to Vanya,
They ran straight to Vanya,
They put Vanya on a horse.
They put Vanya on a horse,
The path was shown.
Showed the way
Yes, they punished
"How will you go, Ivan,
Don't yawn around!"

Russian folk tales
Who should wash the pot

The husband and wife were so lazy that it is impossible to say: since the evening in the hallway the door was not locked with a bolt.

- Lock it in the evening, and open it in the morning - one hassle! they said.

Once my wife cooked porridge, flavored it with butter.

They ate the porridge, and the hostess says:

- I cooked porridge, and you, man, wash the pot!

- It's full of nonsense to talk, - the husband answers, - is it a man's business to wash pots. Wash yourself.

“I don’t think so,” said the wife.

“And I won’t,” the man resists.

- But if you don’t, then let the pot stand unwashed for at least a century!

The pot stood unwashed until the evening. The man says again:

- Baba, baba! I need to wash the pot.

The wife soared in a whirlwind:

- She said - your business, here you are mine!

- Well, that's it! Let it be not your way, not mine. Let's agree this: whoever says the first word tomorrow will wash the pot.

- Okay, go to bed - the morning is wiser than the evening.

They went to sleep. The woman is on the bench, the man is on the stove.

In the morning, neither one nor the other gets up, each lies in his place, does not move, is silent.

The neighbors milked the cows long ago, and the shepherd stole the herd. Neighbors interpret among themselves:

- Why is Malanya late today? The cow was not kicked out. Did something happen to them? Should have visited!

As long as they judged, they rowed, one neighbor came to them. She knocked on the window once, then twice, no one answered. She is in the yard and in the hut, since the door is not bolted.

She came in and saw: the hostess was lying on a bench.

- Why are you lying down?

And Malanya lies, rummages around the hut with her eyes, but does not move and does not give an answer ...

The neighbor looked at the stove, and there the owner was lying, his eyes were open, but he didn’t move his hand or foot and was silent.

Neighbor got excited:

“Yes, what are you doing here?!”

- Oh, sick! Oh good people! Yes, what is going on here!

And she began to tell her neighbors:

- One is on the bench, and the other is on the stove, zenkami 1
Zenki - (obsolete) eyes.

The women fled to Malanin's hut. They look at Malanya, then at the owner:

- What's wrong with you? Maybe send for a fershal al for a priest?

The owners are silent, as if they have taken water in their mouths, they look with all their eyes, but do not move and do not give a voice.

The neighbors talked, gossiped among themselves, but not a century to hustle in someone else's hut, each has its own business. They began to disperse. And one said:

- Baboons! It's not good to leave them alone. Someone needs to be with them, to watch until the tenth and the clerk arrive. It can be seen that they are no longer tenants, the poor, in this world!

She spoke like this, and the women all to the door and away from the hut.

- Oh, my dough will leave the sourdough! one screams.

- And my children are not yet fed! – another thought.

- And at least make me rich, I won’t be left alone with them - I’m afraid of one, little women!

“Well, if it’s like that, there’s nothing to do, I’ll sit with them,” said the crooked bean. They were good people, albeit lazy. Go and hurry up the tenth. And for that, at least don’t take pity on Malanin’s coat, women, to give it back. She doesn’t have to sew anymore ...

- And you do not care about someone else's good! cried Malanya and jumped up from the bench. - It’s not done by you, it’s not for you to wear my caftan!

At that very moment, the husband quietly lowered his legs from the stove and said:

- Well, Malanya, you spoke first, you have to wash the pot!

The neighbors were dumbfounded, and having come to their senses, they spat and even got out of the hut.

How a man divided geese

One poor peasant ran out of bread. So he decided to ask the master for bread. In order to have something to go to the master, he caught a goose, roasted it and carried it. The master accepted the goose and said to the peasant:

- Thank you, man, you for the goose; I just don’t know how we are going to share your goose. I have a wife, two sons and two daughters. How can we share a goose without resentment?

The man says:

- I'll share.

He took a knife, cut off his head and said to the master:

- You are the head of the whole house - your head.

Then he cut off the back, gives it to the mistress.

- You, - he says, - to sit at home, look after the house - you back.

Then he cut off the paws and gives it to his sons.

- You, - he says, - legs - to stomp on his father's paths.

And daughters wings.

- You, - he says, - will soon fly away from home, here's a wing for you. I'll take the rest!

And took the whole goose.

The master laughed and gave the peasant bread and money.

A rich peasant heard that the master rewarded the poor peasant with bread and money for a goose, roasted five geese and carried them to the master.

Barin says:

Thanks for the geese. Yes, I have a wife, two sons, two daughters - all six. How can we evenly divide your geese?

The rich man began to think and came up with nothing. The master sent for the poor peasant and ordered to share. The poor peasant took one goose, gave it to the master and the lady, and said:

“Here are the three of you with the goose.

He gave one to his sons.

“And you,” he says, “three.

He gave one to his daughters:

“And there are three of you.

And he took two geese.

- Here, - he says, - and there are three of us with geese, - all equally.

The master laughed and gave the poor peasant more money and bread, and drove the rich one away.

Seven-year-old daughter

Two brothers were traveling: one poor, the other rich. Both have horses - the poor mare, the rich gelding. They stopped for the night nearby. The poor mare brought a foal at night; the foal rolled under the rich man's cart. He wakes up the poor in the morning:

- Get up, brother! My cart gave birth to a foal at night.

The brother stands up and says:

- How can a cart give birth to a foal? This is my mare brought.

Rich says:

- If your mare brought, the foal would be near!

They argued and went to the authorities. The rich gave the judges money, and the poor justified themselves with words.

It came down to the king himself. He ordered to call both brothers and asked them four riddles:

What is the strongest and fastest thing in the world? What is the fattest thing in the world? What is the softest thing? And what's the sweetest thing?

And he gave them a period of three days:

- Come on the fourth, give the answer!

The rich man thought and thought, remembered his godfather and went to her to ask for advice.

She put him at the table, began to treat him, and she herself asks:

- Why so sad, kumanyok?

- Yes, the sovereign asked me four riddles, and set a deadline of only three days.

- What is it, tell me.

- And that's what, godfather! The first riddle: what is the strongest and fastest thing in the world?

- What a mystery! My husband has a brown mare; no faster! If you hit with a whip, the hare will catch up.

- The second riddle: what is fatter in the world?

- We have another year, the pockmarked boar feeds; He became so fat that he could not rise to his feet!

- The third riddle: what is the softest thing in the world?

- A well-known case - a down jacket, you can’t imagine softer!

- The fourth riddle: what is cuter in the world?

- The sweetest of all granddaughters is Ivanushka!

- Well, thank you, godfather! I taught the mind, I will not forget you forever.

And the poor brother burst into bitter tears and went home. Meets his seven-year-old daughter:

- What are you, father, sighing and shedding tears?

- How can I not sigh, how can I not shed tears? The king gave me four riddles that I will never solve in my life.

Tell me what riddles.

- But what, daughter: what is the strongest and fastest in the world, what is the fattest, what is the softest and what is the cutest?

- Go, father, and tell the king: the strongest and fastest is the wind, the fattest is the earth: whatever grows, whatever lives, the earth nourishes! The hand is the softest of all: no matter what a person lies on, he puts his hand under his head; and there is nothing sweeter than sleep!

Both brothers came to the king, both the rich and the poor. The king listened to them and asked the poor:

Did you come by yourself or who taught you?

The poor man answers:

“Your Royal Majesty!” I have a seven-year-old daughter, she taught me.

- When your daughter is wise, here is a silk thread for her; let him weave a patterned towel for me in the morning.

The man took a silk thread, comes home sad and sad.

- Our trouble! says the daughter. - The king ordered to weave a towel from this thread.

- Don't freak out, daddy! - answered the seven-year-old, broke off a twig from a broom, gives it to her father and punishes: - Go to the king, tell him to find such a master who would make a cross out of this twig 2
Krosna - loom.

: it would be something to weave a towel on!

The man reported this to the king. The king gives him a hundred and fifty eggs.

“Give it back,” he says, “to your daughter; let him bring me a hundred and fifty chickens by tomorrow.

The peasant returned home even more abruptly, even sadder:

- Oh, daughter! You will dodge one trouble - another will be imposed!

- Don't freak out, daddy! answered the seven year old.

She baked eggs and hid them for lunch and dinner, and sends her father to the king:

“Tell him that the chickens need one-day millet for food: in one day the field would be plowed, millet sown, harvested and threshed. Our chickens will not peck at another millet.

The king listened and said:

- When your daughter is wise, let her come to me in the morning, neither on foot, nor on a horse, neither naked nor dressed, nor with a present, nor without a gift.

“Well,” the peasant thinks, “even a daughter will not solve such a cunning problem; it’s about to disappear!”

- Don't freak out, daddy! said his seven-year-old daughter. - Go to the hunters and buy me a live hare and a live quail.

Her father went and bought her a hare and a quail.

The next day, in the morning, the seven-year-old threw off all her clothes, put on a net, took a quail in her hands, sat astride a hare and went to the palace.

The king meets her at the gate. She bowed to the king.

"Here's a present for you, sir!" - and gives him a quail.

The king stretched out his hand, the quail - fluttered - and flew away!

- Well, - says the king, - as ordered, so it is done. Tell me now: your father is poor, what do you feed on?

- My father catches fish on a dry shore, he doesn’t set traps in the water, but I wear fish in my hem and cook my fish soup.

- What are you, stupid, when the fish lives on a dry shore? Fish swim in the water!

– Are you smart? When has it been seen that a cart has brought a foal?

The king ordered that the foal be given to the poor peasant, and his daughter was taken to live with him. When the seven-year-old grew up, he married her, and she became queen.

Baba Yaga

There lived a grandfather and a woman; grandfather became a widow and married another wife, and from his first wife he had a girl. The evil stepmother did not love her, beat her and thought how to completely lime. Once the father has gone somewhere, the stepmother says to the girl: “Go to your aunt, my sister, ask her for a needle and thread - to sew a shirt for you.” And this aunt was Baba Yaga, a bone leg.

Here the girl was not stupid, but she went first to her own aunt. "Hello, auntie!" - “Hello, dear! Why did you come? - "Mother sent to her sister to ask for a needle and thread - to sew a shirt for me." She teaches her: “There, niece, a birch tree will whip in your eyes - you tie it up with a ribbon; there the gates will creak and slam for you - you pour oil under their heels; there the dogs will tear you - you throw them some bread; there the cat will tear your eyes - you give him ham. The girl went; here it goes, it goes and it came.

There is a hut, and Baba Yaga sits in it with a bone leg and weaves. "Hello, auntie!" - "Hello, dear!" “My mother sent me to ask you for a needle and thread to sew a shirt for me.” - "Good; sit down to weave.” Here the girl sat down at the crown, and Baba Yaga came out and said to her worker: “Go, heat the bathhouse and wash your niece, but look, take a good look; I want to eat it for breakfast." The girl sits neither alive nor dead, all frightened, and she asks the worker: “My dear! You don’t so much set fire to firewood as fill it with water, carry water with a sieve, ”and she gave her a handkerchief.

Baba Yaga is waiting; she went to the window and asked: “Do you weave, niece, do you weave, dear?” - “Weave, aunty, weave, dear!” Baba Yaga walked away, and the girl gave the cat ham and asked: “Isn’t it possible to get out of here somehow?” “Here is a comb and a towel for you,” says the cat, “take them and run away; Baba Yaga will chase after you, put your ear to the ground, and when you hear that it is close, first throw a towel - a wide, wide river will become; if Baba Yaga crosses the river and starts chasing you, you again bow your ear to the ground, and when you hear that she is close, throw a comb - a dense, dense forest will become; She can't get through it!"

The girl took a towel and a comb and ran; the dogs wanted to tear her up - she threw them some bread, and they let her through; the gates wanted to slam shut - she poured oil under their heels, and they let her through; the birch tree wanted to quilt her eyes - she tied it with a ribbon, and she let her through. And the cat sat down at the cross and weaves: he not so much stumbled as he messed up. Baba Yaga went to the window and asked: “Do you weave, niece, do you weave, dear?” - "Weave, aunt, weave, dear!" the cat replies rudely.

Baba Yaga rushed into the hut, saw that the girl had left, and let's beat the cat and scold why he hadn't scratched out the girl's eyes. “I serve you for how long,” says the cat, “you didn’t give me bones, but she gave me ham.” Baba Yaga pounced on the dogs, on the gate, on the birch and on the worker, let's scold and beat everyone. The dogs tell her: “We serve you for how long, you didn’t throw us a burnt crust, but she gave us bread.” The gates say: “We serve you for how long, you didn’t pour water under our heels, but she added oil to us.” The birch says: “I have been serving you for how long, you didn’t bandage me with a thread, she bandaged me with a ribbon.” The worker says: “I have been serving you for how long, you didn’t give me a rag, but she gave me a handkerchief.”

Baba Yaga, the bone leg, quickly sat down on the mortar, urged her on with a pusher, swept the trail with a broom and set off in pursuit of the girl. Here the girl put her ear to the ground and hears that Baba Yaga is chasing, and it’s already close, she took it and threw a towel: the river has become so wide, wide! Baba Yaga came to the river and gritted her teeth in anger; returned home, took her bulls and drove them to the river; the bulls drank the whole river clean. Baba Yaga started chasing again. The girl put her ear to the ground and heard that Baba Yaga was close, threw a comb: the forest became so dense and scary! Baba Yaga began to gnaw it, but no matter how hard she tried, she could not gnaw it and turned back.

And the grandfather has already arrived home and asks: “Where is my daughter?” “She went to her aunt,” says the stepmother. A little later, the girl ran home. "Where have you been?" the father asks. "Ah, father! she says. - So and so - my mother sent me to my aunt to ask for a needle and thread - to sew a shirt for me, and my aunt, Baba Yaga, wanted to eat me. “How did you leave, daughter?” So and so - says the girl. Grandfather, when he found out all this, became angry with his wife and shot her; and he began to live with his daughter and live and make good, and I was there, drinking honey-beer: it flowed down my mustache, it didn’t get into my mouth.

Underworld

In that old time, when the world was filled with goblin, witches and mermaids, when the rivers flowed with milk, the banks were jelly, and fried partridges flew across the fields, at that time there lived a king named Gorokh with Tsarina Anastasia the Beautiful; they had three princely sons.

And suddenly a great misfortune befell - an unclean spirit dragged the queen away. The eldest son says to the king:

“Batiushka, bless me, I’ll go look for my mother!”

Went and disappeared. For three years there was no news or hearing about him. The second son began to ask:

“Father, bless me on my journey, perhaps I will be lucky enough to find both my brother and my mother!”

The king blessed. He went and also disappeared without a trace - as if he had sunk into the water.

The youngest son, Ivan Tsarevich, comes to the king:

- Dear father, bless me on my way, maybe I will find my brothers and my mother!

- Come on, son!

Ivan Tsarevich set off in an alien direction. I rode and rode and came to the blue sea. Stopped on the bank and thinks:

"Where is the path to go now?"

Suddenly thirty-three spoonbills flew to the sea, hit the ground and became red maidens - all are good, but one is the best. Undressed and jumped into the water. How many, how few they swam - Ivan Tsarevich crept up, took from that girl that is more beautiful than all, a sash 3
Sash - reduce. - caress. from "sash" - a wide belt made of fabric.

And hid it in his bosom.

The girls swam, went ashore, began to dress - there was not one sash.

“Ah, Ivan Tsarevich,” says the beauty, “give me the sash!”

“Tell me first, where is my mother?”

- Your mother lives with my father, with Voron Voronovich. Go up the sea, you will come across a silver bird - a golden tuft. Wherever she goes, go there!

Ivan Tsarevich gave her the sash and went up the sea. Here he met his brothers, greeted them and took them with him.

They walk along the shore, they saw a silver bird - a golden crest and ran after it. The bird flew, flew and rushed under the iron slab, into the underground pit.

- Well, brothers, - says Ivan Tsarevich, - bless me instead of a father, instead of a mother: I will go down into this pit and find out what the land of the infidel is like, is our mother not there!

The brothers blessed him, he tied himself with a rope and climbed into that deep hole. He went down neither more nor less - exactly three years. He got down and went down the road.

Walking, walking, walking, I saw a copper kingdom: thirty-three spoonbill girls were sitting in the palace, embroidering towels with cunning patterns - cities with suburbs.

- Hello, Ivan Tsarevich! - says the princess of the copper kingdom. - Where are you going, where are you going?

I'm going to look for my mother!

- Your mother is with my father, with Voron Voronovich. He is cunning and wise, in the mountains, in the valleys, in the dens 4
Nativity scene - (obsolete) cave, hidden place.

Flying through the clouds! He will kill you, good fellow! Here is a ball for you, go to my middle sister - what she will tell you. When you go back, don't forget me!

Ivan Tsarevich rolled the ball and followed him. He comes to the silver kingdom, and there sit thirty-three spoonbill maidens. The princess of the silver kingdom says:

- Before the Russian spirit was not to be seen, not to be heard, but now the Russian spirit appears with one's own eyes! What, Ivan Tsarevich, are you whining about business, or are you trying business?

“Oh, fair girl, I’m going to look for my mother!”

- Your mother is with my father, with Voron Voronovich. And he is cunning, and wise, he flew through the mountains, through the dales, through the dens, through the clouds! Eh, prince, because he will kill you! There is a ball on you, go to my younger sister - what will she tell you: should I go forward, or go back?

Ivan Tsarevich comes to the golden kingdom, and thirty-three spoonbill girls are sitting here, embroidering towels. Above all, better than all, the princess of the golden kingdom is such a beauty that it cannot be said in a fairy tale or described with a pen. She says:

- Hello, Ivan Tsarevich! Where are you going? Where are you heading?

- I'm going to look for my mother!

- Your mother is with my father, with Voron Voronovich. And he is cunning, and wise, he flew through the mountains, through the dales, through the dens, through the clouds! Eh, prince, because he will kill you! You have a ball on you, go to the pearl kingdom: your mother lives there. When she sees you, she will rejoice and immediately order: “Nanny-mothers, give my son green wine!” And you don’t take it, ask her to give you three-year-old wine that is in the cupboard, and a burnt crust for a snack. Don't forget: my father has two vats of water in the yard - one is strong water, and the other is weak. Move them from place to place and drink strong water. And when you fight with Raven Voronovich and defeat him, ask him only for a feather staff.

For a long time, the prince and the princess talked and fell in love with each other so much that they did not want to part, but there was nothing to do - Ivan Tsarevich said goodbye and set off on his way.

Walked, walked, comes to the pearl kingdom. When his mother saw him, she was delighted and shouted:

- Babysitters! Give my son green wine!

- I don’t drink ordinary wine, give me a three-year-old one, and a burnt crust for a snack!

The prince drank the three-year-old wine, took a bite of the burnt crust, went out into the wide courtyard, rearranged the vats from place to place and began to drink strong water.

Suddenly Raven Voronovich arrives. He was as bright as a clear day, but when he saw Ivan Tsarevich, he became darker than the dark night. He sank down to the vat and began to draw the helpless water.

Once upon a time there were two brothers, two brothers - a sandpiper and a crane. They mowed down a stack of hay and placed it among the Poles.


Once upon a time there was an old man, the old man had a well, and there was a dace in the well, and here the fairy tale ends.


Once upon a time there was a king, the king had a yard, there was a stake in the yard, a bast on the stake; can't you tell from the beginning?

Shall I tell you a fairy tale about a white bull?
- Tell.
- Tell me, tell me, tell me a fairy tale about a white bull?
- Tell.
- You tell me, yes I say, but what will you have, but how long it will be! Shall I tell you a fairy tale about a white bull?

Shall I tell you a fairy tale about a white goose?
- Tell.
- That's all she is.

Shall I tell you a boring tale?
- Tell.
- You say: tell me, I say: tell me; to tell you a boring tale?
- No need.
- You say: don't, I say: don't; to tell you a boring tale? - etc.

There lived an old man. Went to the mill to grind flour...
- Well, here you beckoned, but you don’t tell!
- If only he arrived, told, and he, maybe a week will pass!

A goose flew, and as it landed on the road, it fell into the water.
Mok, mok. Kitty, kitty - soaked, got out, vykis.
- sat down on the road and again fell into the water.
Mok mok kitty kitty - vykis got out, etc.

The bear got up on the deck -
Bultykh in the water!
Already he is wet in the water, wet,
Already he is in the water kitty, kitty,
Wet, vykis,
Get out, dry.
The bear got up on the deck ...

The river flows
Bridge across the river
Sheep on the bridge
The sheep has a tail
Bast on the tail
Tell me first?

The priest had a dog
He loved her.
She ate a piece of meat
He killed her.
Buried in a hole
And wrote the inscription
what:
The priest had a dog
etc.

Once upon a time there was a king Vatuta and the whole fairy tale is here.
There is a gingerbread house,
decorated with raisins,
Shines in the light of the moon.
Candy door, Can't you tell from the end?..

Let's go further.
We see the bridge
On the bridge the crow dries.
Grab her by the tail
Shast under the bridge -
Let her get wet!
Let's go further.
We see the bridge
A crow gets wet under the bridge.
Grab her by the tail
Shake it on the bridge -
Let her dry!
Let's go further...

The river flows
Bridge across the river
Sheep on the bridge
The sheep has a tail
Bast on the tail
Tell me first?

The bear came to the ford,
Yes, splash into the water!
He's already wet, wet, wet,
He's a kitty, kitty, kitty.
Soaked, Vykis, Got out, Dried up,
I got up on the deck - Bultykh into the water ...;

Once upon a time there were two brothers, two brothers - a sandpiper and a crane.
They mowed down a stack of hay and placed it among the Poles.
Can't you tell the tale again from the end?

Did we go with you?
- Let's go!
Did you find the boot?
- Found!
- Did I give it to you?
- Dal!
- Did you take it?
- Got it!
- Where is he?
- Who?
- Yes, not who, but what!
- What?
- Boot!
- Which?
- Well, like that! Did we go with you?
- Let's go!
Did you find the boot?
- Found

Can I tell you a story about an owl?
- Tell!
- Good! Listen, don't interrupt!
The owl flew
Funny head.
Here she flew, flew,
sat on a birch,
She turned her tail,
I looked around,
I sang a song
And flew again.
Here she flew, flew,
On the birch of the village
She turned her tail,
I looked around,
I sang a song
And flew again...
Should I say more?

Oak stands over the river.
On that oak sits a magpie -
looks into the river.
And the cancer got out of the water and crawls.
Here he climbs and crawls, climbs and crawls, and the magpie looks.
Here she looks, and the cancer crawls and creeps
Here he climbs and crawls, climbs and crawls. And the magpie is watching.
She looks, and looks, and looks. And cancer creeps and crawls ...

I was walking across a bridge
Look - the crow gets wet.
I took the crow by the tail,
Put her on the bridge -
Let the crow dry!
I walked again across the bridge,
Look - the crow dries.
I took the crow by the tail,
Put her under the bridge -
Let the crow get wet!
Again I walked across the bridge,
Look - the crow gets wet.
I took the crow by the tail,
Put her on the bridge -
Let the crow dry!
I'm back on the bridge
Look - the crow dries.
I took the crow by the tail,
Put her under the bridge -
Let the crow get wet!
I came to the same bridge
Look - the crow gets wet ...

A stuffed meow was sitting on a pipe,
The scarecrow meowed a song.
Scarecrow-meow with red-red mouth,
It tortured everyone with a terrible song.
All around the scarecrow is sad and sickening,
Because his song is about the fact that
A stuffed meowache sat on a pipe ...

Once upon a time we were friends
Cat and Workot.
They ate from the same table
Looked through the window from one angle,
They went for a walk from one porch. . .
Wouldn't you like to listen to the tale again from the end?

The dog was walking across the bridge
She tied her tail in the mud,
Pulled, pulled, stretched out the tail,
I just got my nose stuck in a swamp.
Pulled, pulled..

On the mountain - a hut,
An old woman lives in it.
Sitting on the stove
Chews rolls.
Here she stood
She took out a washcloth from behind the stove. . .
The old woman's bast is good!
Why not start the story from the beginning?

In some kingdom
In an unknown state
Not where we live
A marvelous thing happened
A wonderful miracle appeared:
An important turnip grew in the garden,
Every old woman praised:
one day
You don't go around.
The whole village ate half of that turnip for a month,
Barely got there.
The neighbors saw
They ate the other half for three weeks.
The rest was piled on the cart,
Dragged past the forest
The cart was broken.
A bear ran by - he was surprised,
Falling asleep with fear...
When he wakes up -
Then the story goes on!

Once upon a time there was a Tsar Bubenets.
He wanted to build himself a new palace
They brought him wet boards,
They laid it on the sand to dry.
Dried, dried, dried.
They put it in the river and soaked it.
Again dried - dried up,
Soaked again - soaked!
This is how the boards will be ready,
Then we will take up this fairy tale again.
It won't be soon though:
It will be that year
When the goblin dies, -
And he hasn't gotten sick yet!

Aunt Arina
cooked porridge,
Egor and Boris
They fought over porridge.
Washed, washed,
Start from the beginning!

At grandmother's hut
Burenka chewed grass,
She chewed, chewed - was silent.
I saw: on the fence-bast.
I saw a washcloth - mooed ...
Should I say about Burenka first?

Once upon a time there was a grandmother
Yes, by the river
Grandma wanted
Swim in the river.
She bought
Soap and wash.
This story is good
Start over...

Kutyr-Mutyr lived in the middle of the Polish,
He mowed himself a stack of hay.
A ram and a sheep came
Ate the whole stack of hay...
Can't you tell the tale again from the end?

Russian folklore is diverse, and boring tales are one of its facets. There is a version that tedious tales were woven by storytellers who were fed up with requests to tell another tale. And they ended their tales with cheerful excuses.

Boring are fairy tales in which the same piece of text is repeated many times.

A boring fairy tale can switch the child's attention. This is what our mother did when my brother and I annoyed us with something, but she could not calm us down.

- And let me tell you a fairy tale about a white bull.
- No I do not want to!
- You do not want - and I do not want. Can I tell you a story about a white bull?
- Tell me.
- Tell you - and tell me. Tell you a fairy tale about a white bull? ..

A boring fairy tale is a fake fairy tale. Our writers have proposed a classification of boring tales.

Unnecessarily short boring tales

There is a beginning, a fabulous (or not so fabulous) beginning, and an unexpectedly quick ending.

There were two geese. That's the whole story.

Unnecessarily unfinished boring tales


No explanation is needed here: the tale has an unfinished ending.

There was a king Dodon. He built a house of bones, Gathered bones from all over the kingdom, They began to wet - they soaked, They began to dry - the bones dried up, Wet again ...
- Well, what happened next?
- And when they get wet, then I'll tell you.


Unnecessarily repetitive boring tales

Buy an elephant!
Why do I need an elephant?
- Everyone asks “why do I need it”, and you take it and buy an elephant.
- Get off!
- I'll leave you, but first you buy an elephant.

Pseudo-endless boring tales

The priest had a dog, He loved her, She ate a piece of meat, He killed her, Buried her in the ground. And the inscription wrote that ... The priest had a dog ...

This also includes a fairy tale about a white bull, which “builds up” the plot based on the answers.

We offer you a small collection of boring fairy tales

Once upon a time there was a king, the king had a yard, there was a stake in the yard, a bast on the stake; can't you tell from the beginning?

Shall I tell you a fairy tale about a white goose?
- Tell.
- That's all she is.

Shall I tell you a boring tale?
- Tell.
- You say: tell me, I say: tell me; to tell you a boring tale?
- No need.
- You say: don't, I say: don't; to tell you a boring tale?

Once upon a time there was an old man, the old man had a well, and there was a dace in the well, and here the fairy tale ends.


— Did we go with you?
— Went.
Did you find the cover?
— Found.
- And where is he?
- What?
- Casing.
- Which?
— How is it what? Did we go with you?

Once upon a time there lived a ram and a sheep. They mowed down a stack of hay and placed it among the Poles. Can't you tell the tale again from the end?

Once I was walking across the bridge, looking - the crow was drying up, I took the crow by the tail, put it under the bridge, let the crow get wet.
I again came to the bridge, looking - the crow gets wet, I took the crow by the tail, put it on the bridge, let the crow dry ...

Was it in the bath? - Was. - Did you wash your body? - Soap. - Where's the bast? Start over...

There lived an old man. Went to the mill to grind flour...
- Well, here you beckoned, but you don’t tell!
- If only he arrived, told, and he, maybe a week will pass!

A goose flew, sat on the road - fell into the water. Mok-mok, kitty-kitty - wet, vykis, got out - sat on the road and again fell into the water. Mok-mok, kitty-kitty, vykis, got out, etc.

Listen, listen! I'll tell you a fairy tale - good, very good, long, long, interesting, very interesting!
There lived a crane. He planned to marry a beautiful girl, a heron. Went to get married. Here he is walking through the swamp - his legs are bogged down. He will pull his legs out of the swamp - the tail will get stuck; pull out the tail - the legs get stuck; he will pull out his legs - the tail will get stuck; pull out the tail - the legs get stuck; he will pull out his legs - the tail will get stuck ...
Is my story good?

The bear came to the ford,
Bultykh in the water!
He's already wet, wet, wet,
Already he is kitty, kitty, kitty,
Wet, vykis, got out, dried up.
I got up on the deck - Bultykh into the water!
He's wet, wet, wet....


- Tell you a story about an owl?
- Tell!
- Good! Listen, don't interrupt!
The owl flew
Cheerful head.
Here she flew, flew,
sat on a birch,
She turned her tail,
I looked around,
I sang a song
And flew again.
Here she flew, flew,
sat on a birch,
She turned her tail,
I looked around,
I sang a song
And flew again...
Should I say more?

Once upon a time, Yashka
He had a red shirt
Buckle on the belt
Hat on the head
A rag around the neck
In the hands - a bunch of bast.
Is my story good?