"Winnie the Pooh and everything, everything, everything." Winnie the Pooh and all-all-all Brief description of the fairy tale Winnie the Pooh

CHAPTER ONE,

IN WHICH WE MEET WINNIE THE POOH AND SOME BEES

Well, here is Winnie the Pooh.

As you can see, he goes down the stairs after his friend Christopher Robin, head down, counting the steps with the back of his head: boom-boom-boom. He doesn’t yet know any other way to get down the stairs. Sometimes, however, it seems to him that some other way could be found, if only he could stop babbling for a minute and concentrate properly. But alas, he has no time to concentrate.

Be that as it may, he has already come down and is ready to meet you.

Winnie the Pooh. Very nice!

You're probably wondering why his name is so strange, and if you know English, you'll be even more surprised.

This unusual name was given to him by Christopher Robin. I must tell you that Christopher Robin once knew a swan on a pond, whom he called Pooh. For a swan it was very suitable name, because if you call a swan loudly: “Pu-uh! Pu-uh!” - and he doesn’t respond, then you can always pretend that you were just pretending to shoot; and if you called him quietly, then everyone will think that you just blew on your nose. The swan then disappeared somewhere, but the name remained, and Christopher Robin decided to give it to his bear cub so that it would not be wasted.

And Winnie was the name of the best, kindest bear in the zoo, whom Christopher Robin loved very, very much. And she really, really loved him. Whether she was named Winnie in honor of Pooh, or Pooh was named in her honor - now no one knows, not even Christopher Robin's dad. He once knew, but now he has forgotten.

In a word, now the bear’s name is Winnie the Pooh, and you know why.

Sometimes Winnie the Pooh likes to play something in the evening, and sometimes, especially when dad is at home, he likes to sit quietly by the fire and listen to some interesting fairy tale.

This evening...

Dad, how about a fairy tale? - asked Christopher Robin.

What about a fairy tale? - Dad asked.

Could you tell Winnie the Pooh a story? He really wants it!

“Maybe I could,” said Dad. - Which one does he want and about whom?

Interesting, and about him, of course. He's SUCH a teddy bear!

Understand. - said dad.

So please, daddy, tell me!

“I’ll try,” said dad.

And he tried.

A long time ago - it seems like last Friday - Winnie the Pooh lived alone in the forest, under the name Sanders.

What does "lived under a name" mean? - Christopher Robin asked immediately.

This means that the plaque above the door said "Mr. Sanders" in gold letters, and he lived underneath it.

“He probably didn’t understand it himself,” said Christopher Robin.

“But now I understand,” someone muttered in a deep voice.

Then I will continue,” said Dad.

One day, while walking through the forest, Pooh came out into a clearing. There was a tall, tall oak tree growing in the clearing, and at the very top of this oak tree someone was buzzing loudly: zhzhzhzhzh...

Winnie the Pooh sat down on the grass under a tree, clasped his head in his paws and began to think.

At first he thought like this: “This is buzzing for a reason! No one will buzz in vain. The tree itself cannot buzz. So, someone is buzzing here. Why would you buzz if you are not a bee? In my opinion, so!”

Then he thought and thought some more and said to himself: “Why are there bees in the world? To make honey! In my opinion, so!”

Then he stood up and said:

Why is there honey in the world? So that I can eat it! In my opinion, this way and not otherwise!

And with these words he climbed the tree.

He climbed, and climbed, and climbed, and along the way he sang to himself a song that he himself immediately composed. Here's what:

The bear loves honey very much!
Why? Who will understand?
In fact, why
Does he like honey that much?

So he climbed a little higher... and a little more... and just a little bit higher... And then another chugging song came to his mind:

If bears were bees,
Then they wouldn't care
Never thought
Build a house so high;
And then (of course, if
Bees - they were bears!)
We bears would have no need to
Climb such towers!

To tell the truth, Pooh was already pretty tired, which is why Pyhtelka turned out to be so plaintive. But he only has a very, very, very little bit left to climb. All you have to do is climb this branch and...

FUCK!

Mother! - Pooh shouted, flying a good three meters down and almost hitting his nose on a thick branch.

Eh, why did I just... - he muttered, flying another five meters.

But I didn’t want to do anything bad... - he tried to explain, hitting the next branch and turning upside down.

And all because,” he finally admitted, when he had turned over three more times, wished all the best to the lowest branches and smoothly landed in a prickly, thorny thorn bush, “it’s all because I love honey too much!” Mother!…

Pooh climbed out of the thorn bush, pulled the thorns out of his nose and began to think again. And the very first thing he thought about was Christopher Robin.

About me? - Christopher Robin asked in a voice trembling with excitement, not daring to believe such happiness.

Christopher Robin said nothing, but his eyes grew larger and larger, and his cheeks grew pinker and pinker.

So, Winnie the Pooh went to his friend Christopher Robin, who lived in the same forest, in a house with a green door.

Good morning, Christopher Robin! - said Pooh.

Good morning, Winnie the Pooh! - said the boy.

I wonder if you happen to have a balloon?

A balloon?

Yes, I was just walking and thinking: “Does Christopher Robin happen to have a hot air balloon?” I was just curious.

Why did you need balloon?

Winnie the Pooh looked around and, making sure that no one was listening, pressed his paw to his lips and said in a terrible whisper:

Honey! - repeated Pooh.

Who is it that goes for honey with balloons?

I'm walking! - said Pooh.

Well, just the day before, Christopher Robin was at a party with his friend Piglet, and all the guests were given balloons. Christopher Robin got a huge green ball, and one of the Rabbit’s Relatives and Friends got a big, big blue ball, but this Relatives and Friends didn’t take it, because he himself was still so small that they didn’t take him to visit, so Christopher Robin had to , so be it, take both balls with you - green and blue.

Which one do you like best? - asked Christopher Robin.

Pooh clasped his head in his paws and thought deeply, deeply.

That's the story, he said. - If you want to get honey, the main thing is that the bees do not notice you. And so, if the ball is green, they may think that it is a leaf and will not notice you, and if the ball is blue, they may think that it is just a piece of the sky and will not notice you either. The whole question is - what are they more likely to believe?

Do you think they won’t notice you under the balloon?

Then you better take the blue ball, said Christopher Robin.

And the issue was resolved.

The friends took a blue ball with them, Christopher Robin, as always (just in case), grabbed his gun, and both went on a hike.

The first thing Winnie the Pooh did was to go to a familiar puddle and roll around in the mud until he became completely black, like a real cloud. Then they began to inflate the balloon, holding it together by the string. And when the balloon swelled so much that it seemed like it was about to burst, Christopher Robin suddenly let go of the string, and Winnie the Pooh smoothly flew into the sky and stopped there, just opposite the top bee tree, just a little to the side.

Hurray! - Christopher Robin shouted.

What's great? - Winnie the Pooh shouted to him from the sky. - Well, who do I look like?

A bear flying in a hot air balloon!

Doesn't he look like a little black cloud? - Pooh asked anxiously.

Not good.

Okay, maybe it looks more like it from here. And then, who knows what will come to the bees’ minds!

Unfortunately, there was no wind, and Pooh hung in the air completely motionless. He could smell the honey, he could see the honey, but, alas, he could not get the honey.

After a while he spoke again.

Christopher Robin! - he shouted in a whisper.

I think the bees suspect something!

What exactly?

I don't know. But, in my opinion, they are acting suspiciously!

Maybe they think you want to steal their honey?

Maybe so. Who knows what the bees will think of!

Year of writing: 1926

Genre of the work: fairy tale

Main characters: Christopher Robin- boy, Winnie the Pooh- teddy bear, Piglet- pig.

Plot

Christopher Robin is friends with the teddy bear Winnie the Pooh. Different stories happen in the forest. One day Pooh decided to climb to the top of the tree for honey. I used a balloon for this. But the bees began to sting the unwanted guest, and the boy fired at the ball with a gun. Because of the bites, Winnie the Pooh's paws could only stick out to the top. Another time they went to visit a rabbit. Having eaten a lot, the bear cub was unable to leave the hole and got stuck. For a week, the boy read books on one side, and the rabbit used his hind legs as a towel rack. There was also an adventure with Kanga and little Roo. The Kange in the bag was replaced by Piglet for Roo. We didn’t know what to feed the Tiger; fish oil worked for her. The boy leaves the forest with Pooh. They took an oath of allegiance.

Conclusion (my opinion)

The book encourages you to value your friendships. Don’t leave a friend in trouble, but lend a helping hand. A person who is open to communication has many friends.

A boy named Christopher Robin had a teddy bear called Winnie the Pooh. Christopher's father told his son funny stories about the adventures of a funny little bear.

In the first story, Winnie the Pooh tries to get honey from wild bees. He calls Christopher for help. In a balloon, the bear cub rises up to reach the hollow with honey. Bees don't like unexpected visitors. To help Winnie the Pooh come down to earth, the boy shoots a ball. The bear cub falls to the ground. He concludes that the bees were wrong and their honey was also wrong.

The next day, Winnie the Pooh went for a walk in the forest. He walked and composed grumbling songs. Then he noticed a hole. The little bear concluded that if there is a hole, then there is a Rabbit there, the Rabbit is his friend. Winnie the Pooh came to visit and ate a lot of honey and condensed milk. He got fat and couldn't get out. Christopher came to the rescue, but also could not get his friend out. Winnie the Pooh had to hang out at the exit of the hole for a whole week until he lost weight. Then all the friends pulled out the bear cub together.

Winnie the Pooh had a friend Piglet. One day Winnie the Pooh was walking around winter forest. Piglet asked what his friend was doing. The bear cub replied that he was tracking down Buka. They started searching together. In fact, the friends followed in their own footsteps. Christopher Robin explained everything to them and the little bear went home for dinner.

Eeyore lost his tail. It turned out that he was hanging on the Owl's doorbell. Winnie the Pooh took the tail to its owner. The donkey was very happy.

Winnie the Pooh and Piglet dug a hole to catch the Heffalump. They heard about him from Christopher. The friends placed a pot of honey at the bottom of the hole. Winnie the Pooh really wanted to eat honey and he climbed into the hole. Piglet thought that a Heffalump was sitting there.

I still had a lot of friends have fun adventures which had a happy ending.

Alan Alexander Milne

"Winnie the Pooh and all-all-all"

Winnie the Pooh is a teddy bear and a great friend of Christopher Robin. All kinds of stories happen to him. One day, going out into a clearing, Winnie the Pooh sees a tall oak tree, at the top of which something is buzzing: zhzhzhzhzhzh! No one will buzz in vain, and Winnie the Pooh tries to climb the tree for honey. Having fallen into the bushes, the bear goes to Christopher Robin for help. Taking a blue balloon from the boy, Winnie the Pooh rises into the air, singing “Tuchka’s special song”: “I am Tuchka, Tuchka, Tuchka, / And not a bear at all, / Oh, how nice it is for Tuchka / to fly across the sky!”

But the bees behave “suspiciously,” according to Winnie the Pooh, that is, they suspect something. One after another they fly out of the hollow and sting Winnie the Pooh. (“These are the wrong bees,” the bear understands, “they probably make the wrong honey.”) And Winnie the Pooh asks the boy to shoot down the ball with a gun. “He’ll be spoiled,” protests Christopher Robin. “And if you don’t shoot, I’ll be spoiled,” says Winnie the Pooh. And the boy, understanding what to do, knocks down the ball. Winnie the Pooh smoothly falls to the ground. True, after this, for a whole week the bear’s paws stuck up and he could not move them. If a fly landed on his nose, he had to blow it away: “Pooh!” Puhhh!” Perhaps that is why he was called Pooh.

One day Pooh went to visit the Rabbit, who lived in a hole. Winnie the Pooh was always not averse to “refreshing himself,” but while visiting the Rabbit, he obviously allowed himself too much and therefore, getting out, got stuck in the hole. Winnie the Pooh's faithful friend, Christopher Robin, read books aloud to him for a whole week, while inside, in the hole. The rabbit (with Pooh's permission) used his back legs as a towel rack. The fluff became thinner and thinner, and then Christopher Robin said: “It’s time!” and grabbed Pooh's front paws, and the Rabbit grabbed onto Christopher Robin, and the Rabbit's Relatives and Friends, of whom there were an awful lot, grabbed onto the Rabbit and began to drag with all their might, and Winnie the Pooh jumped out of the hole like a cork from a bottle, and Christopher Robin and Rabbit and everyone else flew upside down!

In addition to Winnie the Pooh and the Rabbit, there are also piglets Piglet (“Very Little Creature”), Owl (she is literate and can even write her name “SAVA”), and the always sad donkey Eeyore who live in the forest. A donkey's tail once disappeared, but Pooh managed to find it. In search of a tail, Pooh wandered to the all-knowing Owl. The owl lived in a real castle, according to the little bear. On the door she had a bell with a button and a bell with a cord. Under the bell there was a notice: “PLEASE LEAVE IF THEY DO NOT OPEN.” Christopher Robin wrote the ad because even Owl couldn't do it. Pooh tells Owl that Eeyore has lost his tail and asks for help finding it. The Owl embarks on theoretical discussions, and poor Pooh, who, as you know, has sawdust in his head, soon ceases to understand what he is talking about, and answers the Owl’s questions in turn with “yes” and “no.” To the next “no,” Owl asks in surprise: “What, you didn’t see?” and takes Pooh to look at the bell and the announcement under it. Pooh looks at the bell and cord and suddenly realizes that he has seen something very similar somewhere. The Owl explains that one day in the forest she saw this lace and called, then she called very loudly, and the cord came off... Pooh explains to the Owl that Eeyore really needed this cord, that he loved it, one might say, was attached to it. With these words, Pooh unhooks the lace and carries Eeyore, and Christopher Robin nails him in place.

Sometimes new animals appear in the forest, such as Kanga's mother and Little Roo.

At first, the Rabbit decides to teach Kanga a lesson (he is outraged that she carries a child in her pocket, he tries to count how many pockets he would need if he, too, decided to carry children in this way - it turns out that seventeen, and one more for a handkerchief! ): steal Little Roo and hide him, and when Kanga starts looking for him, tell her “AHA!” in such a tone that she would understand everything. But so that Kanga does not immediately notice the loss, Piglet must jump into her pocket instead of Little Roo. A Winnie the Pooh must speak to Kanga very inspiredly so that she turns away even for a minute, then the Rabbit will be able to run away with Little Roo. The plan succeeds, and Kanga discovers the substitution only when he gets home. She knows that Christopher Robin will not allow anyone to hurt Little Roo, and decides to play a prank on Piglet. He, however, tries to say “AHA!”, but this has no effect on Kanga. She prepares a bath for Piglet, continuing to call him "Roo". Piglet unsuccessfully tries to explain to Kanga who he really is, but she pretends that she doesn’t understand what’s going on. And now Piglet is already washed, and a spoonful of fish oil is waiting for him. He is saved from the medicine by the arrival of Christopher Robin. Piglet rushes to him in tears, begging him to confirm that he is not Little Roo. Christopher Robin confirms that this is not Roo, whom he just saw at Rabbit's, but refuses to recognize Piglet because Piglet is "an entirely different color." Kanga and Christopher Robin decide to name him Henry Puschel. But then the newly-minted Henry Puschel manages to wriggle out of Kanga’s hands and run away. He had never had to run so fast before! Only a hundred steps from the house does he stop running and roll on the ground to regain his own familiar and sweet color. So Little Roo and Kanga remain in the forest.

Another time, Tigger, an unknown animal, appears in the forest, smiling broadly and welcomingly. Pooh treats Tigger to honey, but it turns out that Tiggers don't like honey. Then the two of them go to visit Piglet, but it turns out that Tigers don’t even eat acorns. He also cannot eat the thistle that Eeyore gave to Tigger. Winnie the Pooh bursts out in poetry: “What to do with poor Tigger? / How can we save him? / After all, he who does not eat anything / cannot grow!”

The friends decide to go to Kanga, and there Tigger finally finds food he likes - fish oil, Little Roo’s hated medicine. So Tigger lives in Kanga's house and always gets fish oil for breakfast, lunch and dinner. And when Kanga thought he needed some food, she would give him a spoonful or two of porridge. (“But I personally think,” Piglet used to say in such cases, “that he is already strong enough.”)

Events take their course: then an “expedition” is sent to North Pole, then Piglet escapes from the flood in Christopher Robin's umbrella, then the storm destroys Owl's house, and the donkey looks for a house for her (which turns out to be Piglet's house), and Piglet goes to live with Winnie the Pooh, then Christopher Robin, having already learned to read and write, leaves (it’s not entirely clear how, but it’s clear that he’s leaving) from the forest...

The animals say goodbye to Christopher Robin, Eeyore writes a terribly complicated poem for this occasion, and when Christopher Robin, having read it to the end, looks up, he sees only Winnie the Pooh in front of him. The two of them go to the Enchanted Place. Christopher Robin tells Pooh different stories, which immediately get mixed up in his sawdust-filled head, and in the end knights him. Christopher Robin then asks the bear to promise that he will never forget him. Even when Christopher Robin turns a hundred years old. (“How old will I be then?” asks Pooh. “Ninety-nine,” answers Christopher Robin). “I promise,” Pooh nods his head. And they walk along the road.

And wherever they went and whatever happened to them - “here, in the Enchanted Place on the top of the hill in the forest, little boy will always, always play with his little bear.”

Alan Alexander Milne is an English playwright and poet. But he gained worldwide fame as a storyteller and children's author. fiction, especially after the publication of stories about the “bear with sawdust in his head” - Winnie the Pooh.

Milne began writing these stories for his growing son, Christopher Robin Milne, and the teddy bear received the name Winnie the Pooh from Christopher’s real toy. According to information from Wikipedia, the plush toy got its name from the Winnipeg bear (Winnie), a resident of the London Zoo in the 20s of the last century.

Without a doubt, this book is best book of all times and peoples for children. For almost a hundred years it has been extremely popular and has been translated into many languages. Several cartoons have been made based on it; it’s worth remembering the magnificent Soviet version, which is superior to Disney’s in all respects. Some of the admirers of this book are already matured readers, whom the charm of Winnie the Pooh, Piglet, Little Roo, Tigger, and Rabbit cannot leave indifferent.

“Winnie the Pooh and All-All-All” is, in fact, a collection of short stories with the same characters. In the first chapter, Milne makes it clear to readers that this is a fairy tale - a fiction created by a father, a writer, for his son. Christopher has a collection of plush toys that he loves to play with. But the very first story about bees making the wrong honey plunges readers into an incredibly attractive and mysterious world Forests where fabulous animals live. These characters constantly find themselves in non-trivial, but always good adventures. And here the line between reality and the fictional world is already blurred. I can’t believe at all that the Forest is a fairy-tale fantasy and doesn’t exist. Milne's talent draws the reader into interesting game, sometimes understandable only to adults. And children perceive all events as a good fairy tale.

The real world periodically bursts into this fabulous Forest, and new characters unexpectedly appear. And only adults reading this book to their children understand: Christopher Robin was bought new toys. The boy grows up, school begins, new knowledge appears - and the world of the Forest changes with him... Winnie the Pooh also changes. At first he has many weaknesses, he realizes himself that his head is nothing but sawdust. He suffers from this, and even fights against this damage. Towards the end, the bear cub becomes more reasonable. The book was written with great love for children; it is imbued with the spirit of a beautiful and very kind world. There is something for adults to read too...

Main characters: boy Christopher Robin, Winnie the Pooh bear, Piglet Piglet, Eeyore

Plot: Christopher Robin has a good friend, Winnie the Pooh bear. One day, a teddy bear wanted to eat honey after seeing buzzing bees high on an oak tree. He asked Robin balloon, and went up to the hollow where the bees lived. But it’s not so easy to take honey away from hardworking bees! The entire swarm of bees rushed to protect the hollow and began to sting the bear cub. Winnie the Pooh, horrified, asks his friend to shoot down a balloon with a gun. Robin helps, and the clumsy bear is saved.

One day the little bear decided to visit his friend Rabbit. While visiting, Pooh was so stuffed with tasty treats that he couldn’t get out of the rabbit hole. The friends had to wait a long time for Vinnie to lose weight, all this time Christopher read books to his friend. Finally, the bear cub became thinner, and, with some effort, the friends pulled it out of the hole.

Besides the Rabbit, Pooh has many more friends in the forest. He is friends with a little pig named Piglet, with the eternally sad donkey Eeyore, and with the wise Owl.

Eeyore once lost his tail and was very upset. The little bear decides to help his friend and sets out in search of the tail. By chance, he sees a cord from the wise Owl, which she uses instead of a bell. Pooh realizes that this is Eeyore's tail. The Teddy Bear explains to the Owl that this thing is very necessary for the donkey, who was so tied to this cord. Pooh took the tail and took it to Eeyore, which made him immensely happy.

Kanga the kangaroo still lives in the forest with his son Little Roo. The rabbit doesn't like that Kang's mother carries her son in her pocket, and he decides to teach her a lesson. To do this, he must kidnap Little Roo, and instead of him, Piglet will quietly get into his pocket. The little bear's role was to distract Kanga's mother while the Rabbit ran away with the baby kangaroo. Kanga discovers his son is missing already at home. She is sure that no one will hurt Little Roo, and plays a prank on Piglet. She calls him her son, gives him a bath, and wants to give him fish oil. At this time, Christopher arrives, and a crying Piglet rushes to him in the hope that he will confirm that he is not Kanga's son. Robin agrees, since he saw Tiny at the Rabbit's, but does not recognize the piglet. He claims that Piglet is a completely different color. Kanga and the boy decide to name him Henry Pushel, but then Piglet manages to slip away from Kanga and quickly runs away. On the way, the piglet rolls on the ground to return to its favorite color. Kanga and her baby remain together in the forest.

The next time Pooh met Tigger, an unknown animal, in the forest. Pooh offers his new friend honey, but, as it turns out, Tigers don’t like honey. Tigger also refuses acorns when visiting Piglet, and he does not eat thistles either. Finally, the friends took Tigger to Kanga. It turned out that the unknown beast was crazy about such a nasty treat as fish oil. Tigger remains to live with Kanga's mother, and happily absorbs the tasteless medicine, only occasionally diluting it with porridge.

Many more adventures befall the inseparable friends, and they always come to each other’s aid.

Christopher Robin leaves the forest and his friends. The time of parting comes. In honor of this event, Eeyore wrote a long poem to Robin. The boy reads the message carefully, and when he finishes, he sees that only his faithful friend Winnie the Pooh is standing next to him. The bear cub and the boy go to the Enchanted Place. On the way, Robin tells his friend so many stories that they get confused in the head of a bear full of sawdust. Then the boy makes the bear a knight and asks Pooh to remember him, no matter how many years pass.

And the two of them went somewhere, but no matter where they were, in this Enchanted Place their friendship would always continue.

Milne's tale teaches kindness and friendship.

A brief retelling of Milne's fairy tale Winnie the Pooh and that's all

Christopher Robin is a little boy who has a teddy bear named Winnie the Pooh. The boy's father tells his son about the exciting and interesting adventures of the teddy bear and his friends.

In the first story, Winnie the Pooh wanted to eat honey, like a real bear cub. But the sweetness is not so easy to get, because it is stored in a hollow, surrounded by a flock of bees and located on high tree. So Vinnie asks his friend, Christopher Robin, to give him a balloon so that he can rise to a hollow tree full of honey. Flying high and high and approaching the treasured sweetness, Winnie enraged the wild bees, who were ready to attack the bear cub to save the honey. But Christopher Robin helps his friend out of trouble by shooting the ball on which he was hovering near the hollow, looking for sweets.

Another day, Winnie the Pooh decided to visit the Rabbit, who always has delicious treats. Vini, with his unrelenting love for honey, eats one barrel of honey after another, and his belly grows and grows. Winnie becomes noticeably fat and cannot leave the Rabbit's house, and ends up stuck in the passage of the hole. Christopher Robin read various fairy tales to his overweight friend, and everyone was waiting for the bear cub to lose weight and be able to get out of the hole. As a result, when Vinnie shrank in size, they were able to pull him out of the rabbit hole.

One day, Winnie and his piggy friend, Piglet, were walking together through a snowy forest. Piglet asked the bear what he was doing. Pooh replied that he was looking for a certain Buku, and the friends began to hunt together. Winnie and Piglet found someone's tracks and decided that they belonged to Buka. But the search did not end in anything, because the tracks they walked in circles belonged to themselves.

One day, Winnie the Pooh's friend, Eeyore, lost his tail somewhere, so the little bear wanted to help him. After a long search, Winnie finds it with the Owl, who used it as a bell string for her house. Little Bear tells the story of his missing tail to Owl, who later gives it to Pooh because she understands how dear the donkey is to him. Winnie returns Eeyore's lost tail, who was very grateful to his caring friend and happy that the tail returned to him again.

A mother kangaroo and her son, Kanga and Little Roo, live in the forest.

The rabbit did not like the fact that Kanga carried his baby in a bag, because he himself would have to have at least sixteen bags to carry his bunnies. Therefore, he decides to secretly hide Little Roo and replace him with Piglet, who was supposed to pretend to be a kangaroo by climbing into Kanga's bag. Rabbit and Piglet manage to carry out their plan, but Kanga discovers the substitution. She knows that Little Roo is not in danger because Christopher Robin will not harm him. So Kanga decides to play along with Rabbit by pretending that she mistakes Piglet for her son, bathes him and prepares to give him fish oil. Piglet cannot convince Kanga that he is not a baby kangaroo and wants to quickly escape from the dose of medicine. Christopher Robin comes to the piglet's aid and says that he is completely different from Little Roo, but without yet confirming that he is Piglet. Christopher decided to play along with Kanga, coming up with a name for the new “kangaroo”. Greatly frightened, Piglet manages to escape from Kanga's house without receiving his dose of fish oil.

Having heard Christopher Robin's story about the Heffalump, which is actually an ordinary elephant, Winnie the Pooh and his friend Piglet pretend to know what kind of animal the Heffalump is. But, in fact, they never saw him. So they decide together to find the Heffalump by making a trap. By digging a hole at the bottom of which they placed a pot of honey, the friends hope to catch the Heffalump. But Winnie the bear couldn't resist honey, so after eating the sweetness, he gets stuck in the pot. Piglet initially mistook his friend for a Heffalump when he returned to the trap, but later found out that it was none other than Winnie the Pooh.

The book “Winnie the Pooh and Everything Everything Everything” teaches sincerity, friendship and mutual assistance. Each character in the book is special and unique. Everyone loves Eeyore, even though he is always sad and silent, just as they love the Rabbit, who, although grumpy, is loyal to his friends. Piglet and Winnie - best friends, although very different. But all the inhabitants of the forest live harmoniously and love each other, turning a blind eye to their shortcomings. The novel “The Grapes of Wrath” was first published in 1939 and immediately brought John Steinbeck wide popularity. Almost immediately it was translated into many languages ​​of the world, including Russian.

  • Summary Who to be? Mayakovsky
  • Summary of Waiting for Godot Beckett

    This is an absurd play, in which there is deliberately no meaning or logical connections. The heroes are still waiting for some Godot on the road. People pass by them, something happens - fragmentary and incomprehensible (either there is a deep meaning in this, or there is no meaning at all)

  • Summary of Vampilov Eldest son

    Evening. Freshly. Two friends with beauties arrived in an unfamiliar town. The friends counted on the girls' hospitality, but they were offended and closed the doors in their faces.



  •  
    Articles By topic:
    Place of the feat of Saint Mary of Egypt
    Among the saints who became symbols of the Lenten “school of piety” (along with St. Gregory Palamas and St. John Climacus), there is also a woman, and the only one - St. Mary of Egypt. The fifth week of Lent is named after her.
    Past tense (Präteritum)
    Along with Präteritum and Perfekt, it is included in the stage of past tenses. As a complex past tense, it consists of the auxiliary verbs haben or sein in the form Präteritum and the semantic verb in the form of the second participle (Partizip II). Choice of auxiliary verb
    Lunar calendar of surgical operations
    Everyone who is about to undergo surgery carefully approaches the organization of this process: chooses a surgeon, discusses the nuances of the operation, possible complications and recovery time. It will also be important to choose the date for the operation.
    The influence of the Moon on the fulfillment of desires
    The Full Moon is the highest point of the Moon's growth and an extremely powerful time. On this day, you can influence your destiny and change your life for the better if you know how to achieve harmony with lunar energy. The full moon has long been considered a mystical time: full