Big. “The truth of life in fairy tales was M. Prishvina “Pantry of the Sun” Pantry of the Sun what is the truth

>Essays on the work The Pantry of the Sun

What is truth and where to look for it

There is no author who would describe Russian nature so masterfully as Mikhail Mikhailovich Prishvin. Through his descriptions, he was able to convey to readers a lot of useful and vital information. In the fairy tale “The Pantry of the Sun” we meet little characters who, having gone through dangerous trials, learn to value each other and listen to the advice of their elders. Nastya and Mitrasha were orphaned early and learned to run the household, take care of themselves, live and survive.

At first, their neighbors helped them a lot, but these smart children quickly became independent. Once, going for cranberries in the direction of Blind Elani, they almost got into trouble, but their father had long warned them about the dangers that lurked in this area. He said that many people drowned in the Bludov swamp, stepping on the wrong path, but they did not listen, and almost lost Mitrasha. Nastya was twelve at that time, and he was ten.

In his soul he felt like a brave man. The neighbors called him “a little man in a bag,” and Nastya was like a “golden hen on high legs.” Describing this day in the life of children, the author touches on vital issues. He shows how in people, just like in nature, two principles struggle - good and evil. And the level of humanity is only measured by how we go through this path of struggle. In the situation with Nastya and Mitrasha, the children found themselves on different roads and behaved in accordance with their level of selfishness.

Mitrasha did not want to obey his older sister, and Nastya was so carried away by picking berries that she forgot about her brother for a while. Later, she greatly reproached herself for her greed, and gave all the collected cranberries to evacuated children, who were worse off than they were. Mitrasha became more cautious and made a new friend. The late forester's dog now did not take a step away from him. In this little man, whom she saved from imminent death, she saw warmth and care, as if in a former owner. Antipych was a wise and kind man. He, like no one else, knew what the truth of life was, because he lived for more than eighty years on this earth.

When he was asked to tell the recipe for a long and happy life, he always said that everyone is destined to go through certain trials that befall them. And if after these tests you manage not to become embittered, maintain love for others, and remain an open and sincere person, then the test was successful. If it is still possible to draw the right conclusions, then the tests were not in vain. So it is in the case of Nastya and Mitrasha. These young and inexperienced children were faced with a serious circumstance and were able to overcome it with dignity, which means they won.

Sections: Literature

Target:

  • (O) Through analysis and generalization of episodes of the text, give a holistic idea of ​​it. Bring students closer to understanding the idea of ​​the story: the relationship between people, man and nature.
  • (B) Formation of a sense of the Motherland and nurturing love for nature as part of it.
  • (P) Strengthen students’ beliefs in a careful attitude towards nature. Develop critical thinking through reading and writing (syncwine).

Equipment:

  • student drawings,
  • application about nature (signs, symbols),
  • cards with student answers from the previous lesson,
  • explanatory dictionary.

Let's continue to explore topics based on M.M. Prishvin's work "The Pantry of the Sun". The purpose of the lesson is to answer problematic questions. We will discuss the topic in the following order ( this is a conditional plan that students will come to by the end of the lesson): Antipych - one of the heroes of the fairy tale - was M. M. Prishvin's "Pantry of the Sun".

The role of Antipych in the work: Antipych continues to live.

  • "Keeper of Secrets"
  • Antipych through the eyes of Travka.
  • Wisdom and soul of the people.

I. Explanation of the material.

1) Statement of problematic questions: - What is the truth? -What is she like? - Where does he live? - How to find her? - Why should everyone seek the truth themselves?

2) Check homework(story about Antipych). - Antipych - one of the heroes of the fairy tale - was M. M. Prishvin's "Pantry of the Sun". - Tell us about Antipych: Who is he? How old is he? Where does he live? What are you doing? Who does he communicate with? (The old hunter Antipych lived in a lodge in a dilapidated house, which was much older than its owner, supported by supports. Hunters came to Antipych. He could always give advice. He experienced a lot in life, but remained a selfless man. This is a grandfather of 80 - 100 years old He did not have a farm, only a dog, Travka. At first he called her Zatravka, because he took her to “poison” (chase) hares, and then the pronunciation of the nickname changed and began to be heard even more beautifully - Travka.

Conclusion: this hero is really interesting and original. A hero who, according to the author, died, but who appears and acts throughout the entire work.

Is Antipych still alive or dead? (Died). Although Prishvin wrote that Antipych died, he talks about him as if he were alive. “It seems that Antipych lived and will live forever.” It seemed that “he would never die, you even forgot that he died. People constantly came to him for advice (at first they actually came, then they tried to imagine what he would say, what he would advise).”

- What is Antipych's name?

Antip - ancient Russian name, or maybe this middle name is Antipych?

Who do we call by their patronymic?

Those we respect, those who are older; and when such a form of address is heard, it also incites friendly affection.

3) Conversation to reveal the topic of the lesson.

- Why do they go to Antipych for advice?

Antipych knows a lot and has experienced a lot. He speaks in proverbs and sayings, and also in riddles.

- What proverbs did we come across in the work? What about riddles?

“If you don’t know the ford, don’t go into the water,” “He who dares eats two.” How old is Antipych: 80 is not enough, 100 is a lot?

Outwardly, he is a low-key, unheroic person, but with the soul of a hard worker. He has a lot of experience and he shares it. That is why only after many years do interlocutors understand Antipych’s “riddles”, because what has not been tested is not understood.

Antipych - “keeper of the truth”, secrets.

- What kind of truth is this?

In the last lesson you partially answered this question. (Read from cards!)

Antipych promised to tell this truth, but also punished them to look for the truth themselves. Let's try to think critically about the subject.

- Let's write a syncwine about the truth together.

Let's remember the syncwine about Prishvin, we highlighted the main thing: Prishvin pulls a dream out of a person. (Read the card!)

Now you and I will “pull out” the truth from the work “The Pantry of the Sun”.

Work on the board and in notebooks. Card - syncwine. (Truth - Bitter, pure - Stabs, walks, cuts - Peaceful coexistence and struggle - Truth)

Conclusion: a person spends his whole life learning the truth in a harsh struggle for love for people, for the world around him, for nature.

Everyone comes to the truth only through their own experience, specific deeds and actions.

Conclusion: people’s actions determine: on the one hand, love for them, on the other, selfishness towards them. Antipych's truth consists of the struggle for love, so as not to become embittered in severe trials, not to turn into a wild beast, and to survive. In any trials, remain a person who selflessly gives others love, kindness, warmth, light. This is what Antipych is for people.

- Did Travka recognize him? (For her, all people were divided into Antipych and his enemy.)

One is Antipych with different faces, and the other person is Antipych’s enemy “with different faces” - this is not one wise man, kind person, but these are all people, if they are kind, smart, strong-willed.

- So, what kind of person is Antipych?(Kind, wise, the memory of whom remains and helps to live, helps the living.) - And who is Antipych with different faces?(People.)

Conclusion: These are all people who are kind and wise, or rather, these are the people, their wisdom, their soul. It turns out that we are not talking about Antipych alone, but about all the heroes of the work.

- List all the heroes of the work, dividing them into groups: people - nature.(Mitrash, Nastya, Grass, mother, father, Antipych, scouts of swamp riches (geologists) - spruce, pine, wolf - Landowner, black grouse - Kosach, elk, snake, sun, cranberry, grass, stump.)

- What one word can be used to describe all these enumerations?(Nature! - Name words with the same root this word! (spring, Motherland, relatives, parents, people, relative)

There is one of the listed objects of nature, which is very similar to the hero - the man Antipych.

- Define it. What is this?

It's the sun!

Why When talking about Antipych, are we talking about the sun or vice versa? What are the similarities between the heroes?(They selflessly give warmth, kindness, light.)

Don’t you find the truth of Antipych in the sun or the truth of the sun in Antipych? Look at the sun! (Applique of the sun with individual rays on the board.) It shines equally on everyone: on the pantry (natural wealth), and on plants, and on good people, on pine and spruce, on evil people, on animals, on each of us together and separately - it shines equally. We are all different, and everyone fights for a place in the sun, that is, we co-exist together.

- What is the sun like for everyone?

": the hot sun was the mother of every blade of grass, every flower, every marsh bush and berry. The sun gave its warmth to all of them." The truth of the sun is the same truth of Antipych. Same essence: love, goodness, warmth, light transform life, and hatred, evil, coldness darken and oppress it. Just as the sun unselfishly gives warmth to all living things, so Antipych gave goodness to the forest, people, and Grass. Antipych lived in harmony with nature, understood it, knew how to communicate with it, took care of it, treasured it, found the truth in it, encouraged every person to seek it. (- “Ask them: the oak, the birch,” says Yesenin. “Here in Russia, the forest is responsible for everything,” exclaims Leonov in “Russian Forest” - “I am, my friends, writing about nature, but I myself only think about people:" Prishvin speaks out.)

- What can a person take from the forest?(All). - And specifically our heroes?(Berries, mushrooms, peat - wealth)

The action takes place in the Pereslavl region in 1945, in the first post-war years, women with children who were left without husbands especially suffered. (The student reads an episode about the benefits and importance of the forest in human life. ": we went into the pine forest to collect pine needles to heat the hut, and in the bitter frost in winter we carried firewood from the alder thickets on a sleigh. In the summer, the children went to the forest to collect mushrooms, thorns, pears and apples. This rare post-war delicacy satisfied hunger and provided vitamins, and therefore health, until the new summer. The forest provided building material from which huts were cut down on the ashes in the difficult post-war years.)

Nature is the nation's wealth. - What is wealth? What do we mean by the word "wealth"?(Jewelry, gold, money:) - Do you have wealth?(No.) - What kind of wealth did children get from their parents?(Students list animals from the work.) - What else, besides jewelry, do people consider wealth?(Relationships between people (love, friendship, mutual understanding), dream.) - So do you have wealth or not?(Everyone will answer this question for themselves mentally.) - When do people get closer to each other?(When they give love, kindness, warmth or show hatred, evil, coldness?)

In nature there is a constant struggle between good and evil, as in the lives of people, as in every person.

The grass “needed, like any wild animal, to live for itself.” - What does it mean to live for yourself?(This means being selfish, not feeling sorry for anyone, not recognizing your neighbor, not sacrificing anything for anyone, loving only yourself.) - For whom does Grass live? Who does he miss?(For a kind passerby who is a wise, sympathetic person. The dog howled from longing for a person. Affection and love can cure this.) - Or: what “habits of ordinary animals” did the moose see in Nastya and “doesn’t consider her to be a person”?(Habits of a snake. Nastya “turns” into a beast when she is overcome by greed and when she forgets about her brother.) - Where does a person, given his power, get greed even for the sour berry cranberry? - Why is “the wolf, by its very malice, doomed to death”? - Does this observation apply to people?(Yes!)

By fighting for “truth,” that is, by fighting for love, a person fights it for himself. ("But you, passer-by, do not believe the pity of the wolf, doomed to death by his very malice; save pity not for the one who howls about himself, but for the one who howls, not knowing whom now to serve." )

Good and evil, love and hate, peace and destruction, struggle and indifference - everything that exists on earth is looking for a place in the sun. - What role does the sun play in the life of nature and humans? Let's think about this.

The sun is an inexhaustible source of heat, under the beneficial influence of which life develops, the world becomes kinder, comes to life, and is filled with colors and light. - Let's look at the "picture" of the suffering of pine and spruce, how do they fight for light?(“Rising higher and higher,.. they dug dry branches into living trunks and in some places pierced each other through”, “: the trees moaned and howled so much: “,”: they fought among themselves with roots for food, with branches for air and light.” ) - How does nature change when “the first rays of the sun illuminated the sonorous Borina”?(": the mighty trunks became like the lit candles of the great temple of nature", ": the singing of birds is dedicated to the rising of the great sun:" , “The braid began to blossom, the comb caught fire, the rainbow tail spread out like a lyre.”) - “Show” how nature carefully stores and uses the solar heat given off during the day?(":a big black stump that kept the warmth of the sun:", "everyone falls to the warmth.")

To feel the unity of nature and man, the indivisibility of the entire living world, the inextricable, close connection of everything that exists on earth, you need to think seriously. - Can spruce and pine be likened to living beings? - Why do we sympathize with crippled trees?(For Prishvin, trees have a soul. In a peaceful existence, the eternal, harsh struggle for life does not stop.) - In what other episodes of the work do we see the struggle for life?(":the power of the great Antipych:", ":and the little man stopped his big heart in himself. He froze in the precise calculation of his movement, like a fighter: in the blow that determines the outcome of the fight: whether he should live or die", ": two hunters, a man and an evil one his enemy (the wolf), met:".)

In trials, in the eternal harsh struggle for love, for life, a person goes towards the truth.

Man and nature are indivisible, both have a living soul. - What contents is this “pantry” filled with? - Can this “pantry” be considered bottomless?(No.) - How many years will peat last?(100) What about the forests? Yagodnikov? Animals, birds, if not protected and replenished?

For a wise person, a zealous owner, who takes from nature in moderation, wisely, giving her his strength, taking care of her, nature is a friend, an ally. If a person only takes, he will destroy first nature, and then himself. - Who is the “sun pantry” open to?

One who knows and loves nature, who truly knows how to work, who wisely and wisely not only takes, but knows how to give and replenish, who is selfless in his actions, can take advantage of the wealth and treasures of nature.

Was the “pantry” open for Antipych? (Yes. He managed his wealth wisely. He took in moderation. He protected and preserved the forest. He passed on the truth by inheritance.) - What does it mean to master Antipych's truth?(This means loving nature, merging with it, unselfishly taking care of it, which means loving the Motherland . ) - Where in the work do we read lines about complete harmony, the fusion of man with nature?(“Sometimes you bend over in the forest to the quiet backwater of a stream and there, as in a mirror, you see the whole person, big, beautiful: And so he is beautiful there, in the mirror, with all nature, with clouds, forests, and the sun there below sits down too:".)

4) Comment on your grades for the lesson.

II. Homework.

Let's go back to the beginning of the lesson.

What did we talk about today?

What does this sequence look like? (To the points of the plan.)

List the points of the plan.

State what the purpose of homework is? (Write your homework according to plan.)

Mikhail Mikhailovich Prishvin wrote: “...And there is nothing so beautiful in nature that would not be in man himself - this is the battlefield of good and evil, and man is only that man who fights and through his struggle becomes winner."

Selfishness and responsiveness, love for others and hatred - between these enormous vital values, the actions of all the heroes of the story - animals, people - are committed. Who will emerge victorious from this struggle? The images of Nastya and Mitrasha are comparable to the images of spruce and pine trees, which grow in an unusual place for these trees - a swamp. The main characters in the story are orphans. Two coniferous trees also look lonely. The author draws a parallel between trees and children. Nastya and Mitrash quarrel and make up, like trees with branches, they hurt each other with words. Just as often as the guys quarrel, they often spend time doing friendly homework. And the trees, like bridges, threw branches towards each other. And discord between trees happens if a sudden wind suddenly blows. So the wind will blow on Mitrash, blow over him with stubbornness, and he will begin to quarrel with Nastya, “show off.” But Nastya calms down this hurricane simply - she pats her brother on the head, and “her father’s enthusiasm leaves the owner.”

The guys still have little life experience, so the guys didn’t stop near the Lying Stone and didn’t think about the dangers. But you can overcome them only together and with reason.

Nastya and Mitrash, having gone for cranberries, go their separate ways from the Lying Stone. Nastya walks along the “people’s path” where all the people walk. But she set out on this path with a large basket. And its goal is to pick up as many berries as possible, to take as much as possible from life. Raking the berries into the basket, Nastya forgets about her brother. “Yes, she has forgotten about herself and remembers only cranberries, and she wants more and more.” She is no longer walking along the “human” path: “And now, following the cranberry tree gropingly, - where the cranberry tree leads, there she will go, - Nastya has imperceptibly left the well-worn path.”

Mitrash, having rejected human experience and the help of a compass friend, finds himself in Blind Elani. And no one comes to the boy's aid.

But Nastya, as if on holy land, in a “Palestine”, woke up and remembered her brother. And Mitrash mistook the Blind Elan for a clearing. This is how in life we ​​are lurked by disguised evil, which we are not able to immediately recognize.

The guys went for cranberries. Or maybe the author wanted them to know the truth of life? Life is a storehouse of the sun, but treasures are not revealed easily and not to everyone. Everything is learned through personal experience. Only when he found himself in a difficult situation, on the verge of life and death, having weighed the false and the true, did he truly begin to appreciate his loved one Mitrash. Nastya won a difficult victory over herself: because of greed, she almost lost her brother, so she gave the collected cranberries to the evacuated children.

The heroes of the story go through good and bad. Ahead of them is the Dry River, where both paths unite. The author’s words are not accidental: “... both converged on the Sukhaya River and there, beyond the Sukhaya River, no longer diverging, they eventually led out onto the big Pereslavl road.”

“The Truth of Life” (Lesson summary based on the work of M.M. Prishvin
"Pantry of the sun"). (6th grade)

Goals: students’ understanding of the truth of life and the relationship between man and nature;
improving basic skills in analyzing a work of art;
instilling a love for nature.
Tasks:
teach how to work with words according to K. Vazina’s “Tree of Concepts” method;
improve and develop basic types of speech activity
to introduce students to moral and aesthetic values.

Equipment: portrait of M. M. Prishvin, posters with sayings, exhibition of books, basket of cranberries, children's drawings, CD with birdsong.

Hello children! I am very happy to welcome you on this wonderful day. We all love nature, we love to relax in the forest, pick berries and mushrooms. many writers dedicated their works to nature. Among them is Mikhail Mikhailovich Prishvin. Today we turn to his work “Pantry of the Sun”.
K.G. Paustovsky wrote about Prishvin: “In Prishvin’s stories, stories, and geographical essays, everything is united by a man - a restless, thinking person with an open and courageous soul. Great love Prishvin's love for nature was born from his love for man."
Write down, guys, the date and topic of the lesson. Epigraph of the lesson: “After all, my friends, I write about nature, but I myself think about people” (M.M. Prishvin)

The purpose of our lesson: to analyze the text, to reveal the images of Nastya and Mitrasha through their relationship to nature, to clearly be able to express your thoughts and feelings; to comprehend what the truth of life is for the heroes of the work and for you and me.
- Look at the portrait of the writer. What can you say about him?
(Kind, gray-haired, wearing glasses, gaze directed forward, smile on his face)
-Who does he look like from the work?
(On Antipych).
- Now we will work with the words: pantry, treasure, pantry. Let's turn to explanatory dictionary.
- What is the sun? (Gives life, warmth to plants, animals, humans)
- What does the word “truth” mean? (Children discuss in pairs)
Let's work through the "tree of concepts", where words are copied from various dictionaries (see appendix).
(Children make up a derivation word and write down the concept in a notebook and compare it with what is written on the sheet.)
- Who speaks about the truth? (Antipych)
- How does he speak? (Children find from the text)
- Which other heroes help us understand the truth of life? (Mitrash, Nastenka, dog Travka).

Let's start analyzing the work.
Who are Nastya and Mitrasha?
In a notebook we write the epithets we found from the text. We work in pairs.
Mitrasha:
Nastya
Little man in a bag Golden Hen
Freckled
forehead
Darling
Short
Tight housekeeping
Strong
Stubborn hard worker
Smart
Loves to command and kind
Smart
prudent

(Children give an explanation for each word).
You can stage it.
Conclusion: they quarreled, lived like all the guys.
-Where did the children go? What did you take with you?
(For cranberries. Mitrash took with him a gun, a compass (like his father), an ax; Nastya - bread, milk, potatoes, a larger basket.)

Guys, draw in your notebook the path to Bludovo Swamp.

How does nature warn children about danger? (Free speech of children)

Why did the children quarrel?
(Wind of discord).

What kind of wind does Prishvin write about? (About the wind-sower).

What did he bring?
(Two seeds)
- Read how it is written in the work.

How does Prishvin compare spruce and pine with children?
-Where did Nastya go?

(On the beaten track and ended up in Palestine? (Explanation of the word “Palestinian.”)

Where did Mitrasha end up? (Children read the passage)

What dangers await Mitrash? (Gray Landowner).

Tell me about the wolf. What symbol is included in the image of a wolf? (Symbol of loneliness).

Children, how worried were you about the children? (Children's answers).

How does Nastya collect cranberries? (Greedily).

Who made Nastya remember about her brother? (Viper).

And suddenly Grass was nearby. Tell us about her. Why did she come?
(Children must come to the conclusion: you cannot live alone.)

What did Travka bring to the children that Antipych did not tell the children during his lifetime? (About the truth of life).

Read the lesson's epigraph aloud again.
- How does nature help children? (Everything is interconnected in the world: nature and man.)
- Now let’s write a conclusion in the notebook: what is the pantry of the sun.
(... The entire pantry of the sun, like peat, is inherited by a person).

How should we care for nature? How do you relax with your family in nature?
You can tell me about cranberries and give them a try.

In conclusion, write to the children your opinion about the work.
- Well done. After our lesson, dear guys, I think you will want to read other works by M.M. Prishvina.

Annotation. This lesson will allow you to talk with children about the very complex philosophical problem of finding the meaning of life. The conversation begins with animal heroes: the dog Travka and the wolf Gray landowner have their own truth.

Whose life principles should you choose, where can this lead a person in his difficult life when a person ceases to be a person? Prishvin’s fairy tale makes us think about these and many other questions.

Key words: truth, the meaning of life, goodness, fidelity, life for others, anger, selfishness, hatred, life for oneself, love, fidelity.

I would like to offer you a lesson on Prishvin’s fairy tale “The Pantry of the Sun”. Unlike my previous articles, this one is dedicated to a programmatic work. There are a great many lessons on it (both in magazines and on the Internet). And yet I risk offering my own version.

In this work, the starting point for a serious conversation was Antipych’s words about the truth. At first glance, it seems that it is impossible to talk with sixth graders about such a complex topic. But this is only at first glance. This lesson turned out to be one of the most interesting and memorable in my practice. And the concepts “truth of the Grass” and “truth of the wolf” entered the vocabulary of my students and began to be used by them in other lessons.

Lesson progress

1. Creating a problematic situation.

— There were Prishvina in the fairy tale, as in any work of art, a lot of mysteries. For example, there is an episode where the narrator remembers how they asked Antipych how old he was, and he only joked in response. “Antipych, stop your jokes, tell us the truth, how old are you?” - they asked him. “In truth,” answered the old man, “I will tell you if you tell me in advance what the truth is, what it is, where it lives and how to find it.” What kind of truth do you think we are talking about here?
- Let's look at the dictionary.
The meaning of the word “truth” according to Ushakov’s dictionary:
Truth is what corresponds to reality, what actually is, the truth. Tell me the whole truth, don't be afraid of me. Pushkin. 2. Truthfulness, correctness. Nobody thinks about the truth of my words.

The ideal of behavior, which consists in compliance of actions with the requirements of morality, duty, in the correct understanding and implementation of ethical principles. Seek the truth. Stand for the truth. Live the truth. Suffer for the truth.
— The word, as you see, has many meanings. In what meaning, in your opinion, does Antipych use the word “truth”?
- That is, the truth is a kind of guideline to which we must strive, the meaning of life, if you like. How can you rephrase Antipych’s question? (What is the meaning of life and how to find it?)
— What a serious philosophical question is asked in this work! Have you ever wondered what the meaning of life is? In any case, I suggest you think about it now.

2. Text analysis. “The truth of the grass and the truth of the wolf.”

- So, let’s try to find the answer to such a complex question in Prishvin’s fairy tale “The Pantry of the Sun.” Continuing the same conversation, Antipych says to his interlocutors: “Here is Travka, a hound dog, he understands everything from one word, and you, stupid ones, ask where the truth lives.” So, Travka knows where the truth lives, knows what the meaning of life is? Maybe she can help us find the answer to the question?
— Tell the story of Travka’s life.
- What is the truth of Travka? How does she understand this? Truth, or the meaning of Travka’s life, is love for a person; in living not only for oneself, but also for others, in caring for a person; in friendship; kindness, loyalty and devotion.
- Why does Travka feel so bad now?Why does she howl when she climbs a hill? She has lost the meaning of life, she has no one to live for.
— Who is opposed to Grass in this part?Of course, Wolf.
- Why does the wolf howl? What is his truth?He is characterized by anger; the desire to live for itself, the wild beast lives for itself.
- So, in the example of Grass and the wolf, we see two different views on life, two different truths. But Mikhail Mikhailovich Prishvin said: “After all, my friends, I write about nature, but I myself only think about people.” Therefore, of course, we will turn to Nastya and Mitrasha and talk about how they search for their truth.

H. Text analysis. "The path to the truth of Nastya and Mitrasha."

- Let's remember how Nastya and Mitrash lived.
- What can you say about their attitude towards each other? They lived and worked very
together, helped each other, took care of each other, took care of their household.
- Whose truth is their idea of ​​life similar to: the truth of the Grass or the truth of the wolf?
“But life is structured in such a way that it constantly puts a person in front of some obstacles, difficulties, tests a person’s strength, loyalty to his convictions, his principles. What in this work served as a test for children? Their trip for cranberries, their argument, quarrel and how they got out of a difficult situation.)
- What caused their quarrel?They began to argue about which path to take.
- What do we see here instead of friendship, caring for each other? How do children behave in
this episode? What feelings do you have towards each other? They got angry, angry with each other; did not want to listen to each other, did not want to obey the other; everyone in at the moment thought only of himself; Nastya even spat after her brother.

Tasks for the first group:
1. Read the episode “Mitrash in the Swamp” (with the words: “Little pomapu, as
Mitrasha moved forward according to the direction of the arrow and the path...” to the words: “Tears flowed down his tanned face and down his cheeks in shiny rivulets.”)
2. Follow how Mitrash got into the Blind Elan. To do this, highlight the sentences that describe the path along which Mitrash walks.
1) What definition does the author give to this trail? Why? By what signs can we determine that in front of us is a path along which people walked?
2) With what feelings does Mitrash walk along this path? Why?
3) Does he remember about his sister? What feelings does he have towards his sister now? Try to guess what he thinks about what happened.
4) Why does Mitrasha leave this path?
6) What is the result of his imprudent act?
“The layer under Mitrasha’s feet became thinner and thinner... but he kept walking and walking forward. Mitrash could only believe the man who walked ahead of him and even left the path behind him.” “Migrash... was not a coward at all - why should he be cowardly if there was a human path under his feet: a man like him was walking, which means that he himself, Mitrasha, could boldly follow it
go".

“Here Mitrash saw: his path turns sharply to the left and goes there far and there
completely disappears. He checked the compass, the arrow was pointing north, the path went to
west... Recognizing in the direction of the white man a path that does not go directly north, Mitrasha
I thought: “Why would I turn left, onto the bumps, if the path is just a stone’s throw away,
visible there, behind the clearing?

Mitrasha chooses the weak path that the compass pointed to. The author defines this path as “human.” You can recognize it by the white grass that grows along the path. This is the path along which a person walked. Mitrash walks along it boldly, because people walked along it, which means he can walk along it too. He doesn't think about his sister. At least the author doesn't write anything about it. But perhaps he thinks that he is right, he is proud that he did not follow the lead of his elder
sisters.

Mitrash leaves the path because the compass needle points to the north, and the path goes to the left, and because right in front of him there is a clean, level place, not at all like something terrible and deadly. As a result, he falls into the Blind Elan and almost drowns.
— What is the meaning of the epithet “human path”? After all, having left this human path, Mitrasha ends up in the Blind Elan. Forgetting about his sister, feeling angry and irritated, Mitrasha leaves the human path.
— In the last lesson, we talked about how Mitrash takes a compass with him because his father taught him so. He said: “This arrow is more faithful to you than a friend: sometimes your friend will cheat on you, but the arrow invariably always, no matter how you turn it, always looks north.” Why did the compass fail the boy in this situation?
— Kozma Prutkov said: “The magnet points north and south; It is up to a person to choose a good or bad path of life.” How do you understand these lines? You can’t mindlessly follow the compass needle. It only indicates where north is. But where you go is up to you to decide. The compass needle will help you get out of the forest, but it will not be able to show you the path in life. It depends only on the person, on his choice.

Tasks for the second group

1. Read the episode “Nastya collects cranberries” (with the words: “At first, Nastya picked each berry from the vine, and bent down to the ground separately for each berry”).
2. Analyze Nastya’s behavior.
To do this, answer the questions:
1) How does Nastya collect berries first and then? Why?
2) Does she remember her brother? What feelings does she have?
3) Remember why they separated.
Is Nastya following the path she has chosen or, like her brother, has she lost her way? Why?
4) How does the moose look at Nastya? Why?
5) What is the author’s attitude towards Nastya at this moment? Why does he talk about her “the old golden hen on high legs”?
6) When was Nastya able to tear herself away from the berries? Why does she, looking at the viper, imagine “as if she herself remained there, on the stump, and now has come out of the snake’s skin and is standing, not understanding where she is”?
“Nastya, as we see, does not fall into a quagmire; nothing threatens her life. But the author’s attitude towards her is clearly changing. Why? She, greedily collecting cranberries and forgetting about her brother, loses her human appearance.
- What do we see? What can a path lead to where resentment reigns, unwillingness to listen to others, and giving in?
“Thus, we see that the path chosen by the children does not lead them to anything good: Mitrasha almost dies, Nastya loses her human appearance.
—Who helps the children? How does Grass help Nastya? Mitrash? Grass. She helps Nastya remember her brother:
“- Muravka, Muravka, I’ll give you some bread!
And she reached into the basket for bread. The basket was filled to the top, and there was bread under the cranberries.
How much time passed, how many cranberries lay there from morning to evening, until the huge basket was filled? Where was the hungry brother during this time, and how did she forget about him, how did she forget herself and everything around her?”
Grass pulls Mitrasha out of the swamp.
- Why did Travka end up near Nastya? Why did Grass rush to Mitrasha’s call?
She felt human misfortune.
— Why does Travka help the guys? What does the Grass remind them of? Grass
reminds children of eternal values: love, devotion, partnership, fidelity;
returns them to humanity, to the human path, to their truth.
— Was everything that happened important for Travka herself? The grass has found its owner.
— What is the future fate of the wolf?Mitrasha kills him.
— What meaning does the author put into this episode? Why exactly does Mitrasha kill the wolf? Killing a wolf is a victory. Victory over evil, indifference, selfishness. To some extent, Mitrash kills the wolf in himself.
— What, according to Prishvin, does each of these paths lead to? Prishvin shows that the path of Grass leads to happiness, the path of the wolf leads to death.
— What was the future fate of the children? Where did they put the cranberries collected in the swamp? Is it important? They give cranberries to children evacuated from Leningrad, showing their care and concern for other people.