Presentation on the topic Caucasian captive. The Caucasus in the life and work of L.N.


“Tolstoy’s “Adolescence”” - Development of speech. Personification, epithets. Correlating the term with the concept. Means of artistic expression. Describe any character. Lyubochka. The final game based on the work of Leo Tolstoy “Adolescence”. Continue the sentence. It will grind, there will be flour. Storm. Make a crossword puzzle. Race for the leader.

“Tolstoy’s Childhood” - 1. Essay - essay 2. Exhibition of drawings. Presentation results. Student of the Faculty of Philology, 342 Yankevichute Diana. Stages and timing of the project. Informational resources. Tolstoy's "Childhood". Tolstoy's "Childhood". Didactic goals. We will study the following chapters. What motivates you to live?

“Tolstoy’s “Swans”” - Generalization. Main part. Part of life. L.N. Tolstoy “Swans”. Literary reading lesson. He opened a school in Yasnaya Polyana. Swan sighed. The ending. Checking homework. Long interesting life. Fairy tales. Rough plan. Division into parts. What do you know about Leo Tolstoy? Acquaintance with the works of Leo Tolstoy.

“Tolstoy Two Brothers” - Run without looking back, very fast. L.N. Tolstoy creates “The ABC” and “Books for Reading”. My memory is strong. I am working. Everyone chooses their own path in life. I want to learn. L.N. Tolstoy participated in the defense of Sevastopol. To warm up. Written for laughs means it’s not true. I really want to study. Fairy tale by L. N. Tolstoy.

“The Lion and the Dog” by Tolstoy - Devotee. She tucked her tail. What was this friendship expressed in? Questions. Do everything yourself if possible. How the lion perceived the death of the dog. Guess the riddles. He tore off a piece of meat. Cover modeling. Love animals. Love, I thought, is stronger than death. Be careful. "Lion and Dog" Don't be annoying.

“Tolstoy Shark” - S. Yesenin F.I. Tyutchev A.S. Pushkin. Entrance towers to Yasnaya Polyana. Entry towers. All things, books, paintings here are original. A.S. Pushkin. Winter is still busy and grumbling about spring. One boy at first overtook his friend, but then began to fall behind. Both are like lizards. The little birds are cold, hungry, tired, and huddle closer together.

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Slide captions:

L. N. TOLSTOY. "PRISONER OF THE CAUCASUS". THE THEME OF FRIENDSHIP IN THE STORY Objectives of the lesson: to follow the text and compare the behavior of the characters at the moment of the next failed escape, sitting in a hole; understand what the friendship between Zhilin and Dina is based on, why the girl evokes sympathy among readers. It is famously remembered, but goodness will not be forgotten. Proverb

Checking homework “Zhilin is preparing to escape” Plan: Getting to know the life of a Tatar village. Work on the tunnel. Finding the road. The escape route is only to the North. Sudden return of the Tatars. The escape.

Chapter V The reader realized that the initiator of the escape was Zhilin. It was he who recognized the area, prepared a hole under the wall, fed the dog, and stocked up on cakes. Let us trace and compare how Zhilin and Kostylin behaved in freedom.

Comparative characteristics of heroes. Zhilin Kostylin Preparing the escape gets acquainted with the area, works on the mine, feeds the dogs, makes a supply of provisions

Comparative characteristics of heroes. Behavior of the heroes in freedom: Zhilin quietly climbed into the hole and got out; “...Zhilin whistled a little, threw a piece of flatbread, Ulyashin recognized... and stopped babbling”; took off his boots and walked barefoot; He’s in a hurry because he lost his way and turned to the right “... hiss, hiss..., but he keeps going.” Flooded in the forest. Calmly looked closely, whistled, laughed

Comparative characteristics of heroes. Behavior of the heroes in freedom: Zhilin Both are tired, but they have to go “I got angry... cursed him. “So I’ll leave alone.” They hid from the mounted Tatar. He is silent, trying to help his comrade-in-arms get to his feet. “I put Kostylin on top of him and dragged him.” “No, I won’t go: it’s not good to abandon a comrade.”

Comparative characteristics of heroes. Behavior of heroes in freedom: Kostylin “Kostylin climbed up, but caught a stone with his foot, and it rattled. ... Ulyashin heard it, wandered in and rushed, and the other dogs followed him.” He also threw off his boots, but cut all his legs, stopped keeping up “Wait a little, let me breathe, my legs are all bleeding.”

Comparative characteristics of heroes. Behavior of the heroes in freedom: Kostylin “... keeps falling behind and groaning” “So I fell out of fear” “As you want, but I won’t get there...” I couldn’t stand the pain. He gave them both away with a shout: “Go alone, why would you... disappear because of me?”

Why did the escape fail? From the work done to compare the behavior and actions of the heroes, it becomes clear that Kostylin turned out to be not Zhilin’s comrade, but a burden on the road. Under the same conditions, Zhilin shows resourcefulness, determination, perseverance, and actively fights for his and his comrade’s release from captivity, while Kostylin is deprived of all these qualities, he is the antithesis of the hero.

“speaking” surname of the heroes. What words are the surnames of the heroes derived from? Vein is a tendon, a strong end of a muscle; sinewy, two-core - strong, elastic; A crutch is a stick for the lame and legless. They often said about a standing person: “well done vein,” “bone and vein, and all the strength.” Or he “cradles” - he trudges along little by little.

Tatar girl Dina What makes Dina help Zhilin? Why does the girl treat the prisoner well and try to make his situation easier, unlike other mountaineers? At what point and why does she stop seeing him as an enemy? (Is it just because he made and gave her a doll?)

Dina Can you call Dina brave and decisive? What endeared Dina to Zhilin and to you, the readers? Is the proverb “Famously remembered, but goodness never forgotten” applicable to the relationship between Zhilin and Dina?

Savior Zhilin sits in the evening and thinks: “what will happen?” Everything looks up. The stars are visible, but the month has not yet risen. Suddenly clay fell on his head; I looked up - a long pole was poking into that edge of the hole. He stumbled, began to descend, and crawled into the hole. Zhilin was delighted, grabbed it with his hand and lowered it - the pole was healthy. He had seen this pole on the owner's roof before. I looked up - the stars were shining high in the sky; and just above the pit, like a cat’s, Dina’s eyes glow in the dark. She bent her face to the edge of the pit and whispered: “Ivan, Ivan!” - and she keeps waving her hands in front of her face, saying, “be quiet, they say.”

What proverbs apply to the content of what you read? If you don't have a friend, look for him, but if you find him, take care of him. You can't buy a friend with money. Friendship is different from friendship, but at least leave the other. A pacer is not a comrade on a journey. Two swords cannot live in one sheath. Take care of your honor from a young age, and take care of your caftan again. It’s better to be lost than to suffer someone else’s misfortune. To be afraid of the crossroads, to not go on the road.

“Prisoner of the Caucasus” is L. N. Tolstoy’s favorite story. The author wrote about the story like this: “This is an example of the techniques and language that I write and will write for big ones,” “the work on the language is terrible, everything needs to be beautiful, short, simple and, most importantly, clear.”

Preparing to write an essay. Topics: 1. Friends and enemies of the main character. 2. Zhilin and Kostylin: different destinies. Think and choose a topic for your essay. Which proverb can you choose as an epigraph to your work? Why? The essay consists of an introductory part in which the author states what he wants to talk about with the reader; the main part, where the main idea of ​​the work (idea) is revealed; conclusions, which provide conclusions about the work and personal opinion about what you read. What is "reasoning".

The theme "Caucasus" can be seen in many artistic and literary works. Writers, artists, poets came to the Caucasian Mineral Waters to relax and receive treatment, and this did not go unnoticed. In Pyatigorsk, Kislovodsk and other cities of the KMV there are not only monuments to M.Yu. Lermontov, A.S. Pushkin, L.N. Tolstoy, but also the places where they stayed during their stay there. These places are very attractive to tourists and city residents.

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Slide captions:

Slide 1
Monument to L.N. Tolstoy in Pyatigorsk

Slide 2
Near the entrance to the Flower Garden, on the sunny side of the boulevard, there is a large building with a columned portico. This is the oldest public building in Pyatigorsk and the first permanent structure on the CMV.
Emperor Nicholas I, generals I.F. Paskevich and G.A. Emanuel, the Persian prince Khosrow-Mirza, writers Pushkin, M.Yu. Lermontov, A.A. Bestuzhev-Marlinsky, L.N. Tolstoy, stayed in this building. V. G. Belinsky, composer M. A. Balakirev, many famous travelers and cultural figures, science and art of the 19th century. Twice a week, on Thursdays and Sundays, from 8 to 12 pm noble meetings with music and dancing were held in the Restoration. Sometimes visiting musicians and artists performed here. One of the rooms bore the gloomy name chambre infernale (“hell room”), in which a gambling card game was played for money. Expensive residential rooms were rented for no more than 5 days.
State restaurant (Kirova Ave., 30)

Slide 3
In January 1943, during the liberation of Pyatigorsk from occupation, the building was severely damaged by a fire, which destroyed part of the rich library of the institute, the archives of the KMV and the city. A major renovation was carried out in 1953-1955 according to the design of the architect I. G. Shamvritsky. At the same time, the architectural appearance of the building was slightly changed. The building was expanded and enlarged, new walls, cornices and parts of columns were made. The internal layout was adapted to the needs of the library and departments of the former institute housed there, called the Research Institute of Balneology

Slide 4
Theater House (Str. Bernardazzi Brothers, 4)
Many Pyatigorsk residents still remember the wide-screen Rodina cinema near Tsvetnik, one of the most visited cinema halls in the city of the last century. The inconspicuous-looking building preserves the memory of the distant past, since it was the very first theater building on the CMV. The theatrical life of Pyatigorsk began with the opening of the State restaurant, where visiting artists and musicians began to perform at noble meetings. However, for a long time there was no special hall intended for performances of theater troupes.
For the first ten years, a visiting drama troupe of Stavropol actors performed at the theater every season, whose repertoire consisted of new plays by N. A. Ostrovsky. In the summer of 1853, a concert by the Danish cellist Elsa Christiani took place here, which was attended by the young Leo Tolstoy.
Later, the Colosseum cinema operated here again, which in pre-war times received the patriotic name “Motherland”. It operated until the 1990s, when it was closed for major renovations designed by A. S. Kihel. Nowadays the former cinema building is occupied by the Coliseum nightclub.

Slide 5
...I'll go to the park in the morning
This is what Tolstoy wrote in his diary on September 12, 1853: “Tomorrow morning I will go to the park and think about the chapter of the Fugitive. I’ll write it before lunch.” This entry greatly worries everyone who writes about Tolstoy’s stay in Pyatigorsk. Based on it, they, repeating each other, claim that the park was the place where a significant part of the work we know as the story “Cossacks” was created, that Tolstoy “loved to walk in the shadow of this park and work on the plans and plots of his works.”
What park do you mean? Well, of course, the one that today is called the Park of Culture and Leisure named after S. M. Kirov. There doesn’t seem to be anything else in Pyatigorsk! It got to the point that several years ago, on May 1 (!), the local history community solemnly opened a memorial plaque placed at the main entrance to this park - it contains those notorious lines from the diary.

Slide 6
This is interesting

Slide 7
I would like to ask: do the initiators of the creation of the board know the full text of Lev Nikolaevich’s diaries? I think it's unlikely. In this case, they would have read the entry made the next day, September 13, when, in their opinion, under the canopy of the park trees the magical lines of the future “Cossacks” were born: “In the morning there was terrible melancholy, in the afternoon I went and visited Bukovsky, Klunnikov ( these persons are unknown to the writer’s biographers)… Then the idea of ​​Marker’s Notes came, surprisingly well. I wrote, went to watch the Meeting, and again wrote Marker’s Notes.” This is how it turned out for Lev Nikolaevich, in a completely different way! And he wasn’t in the park, and he didn’t think about “The Fugitive.” True, I worked that day with inspiration. But still, “Notes of a Marker” is not “Cossacks”, which he continued to think about, but on other days and in other places.

Slide 8
And now about the park. According to the Russian language dictionary, a park is “a large garden, a grove with alleys, flower beds, ponds, etc.” In the middle of the century before last, our current park was not like that. It was a nursery founded in the early 30s - its purpose is indicated by the name given in the report of the Construction Commission dated June 7, 1845: “A government garden with schools of flowers, vines, fruit and various types of broad-leaved bushes and trees for planting in public areas.” gardens and flower beds." There were no traces of any alleys, ponds, or decorative flower beds there. This is confirmed by the plan of Pyatigorsk, drawn up in the 50s. There, the green area in the Podkumka floodplain looks like a continuous mass of plantings, crossed by a single straight path. And, as we see, it was officially called the “Government Garden” or “Garden School”, and in the conversations of Pyatigorsk residents and visitors, the “Government Garden”. The word “garden” in its name almost remained until the mid-twentieth century. Even in the 20s, when this green area had long been actually a park - with alleys, flower beds, ponds and fountains - it was called either the “May 1st Resort Garden” or the “Karl Liebknecht Resort Garden”. The status of a park was given to the garden in the mid-30s. It was only in 1952 that it officially became known as a park. And if Tolstoy wanted to visit the State Garden, he would not have written “I’ll go,” but “I’ll go,” because it was located outside the city. It is even less likely that Lev Nikolaevich arbitrarily renamed the garden into a park - he was usually quite accurate in designating the places of his stay. In this case, what kind of park are we talking about?

Slide 9
Elizabethan flower garden (beginning of Kirov Ave.)
At the beginning of Kirov Ave., on the sides of the huge staircase leading to the Academic Gallery, there is an old flower garden overgrown with low trees and shrubs. It is a historical corner of Pyatigorsk.

Slide 10
Emanuel Park (near the Academic Gallery)
Above the Academic Gallery and along the slopes of Aeolian Mountain to Lermontovskaya Street, the oldest Pyatigorsk park stretches widely, which bears the name of its founder - cavalry general Georgy Arsenyevich Emanuel (1775-1837), hero of the Patriotic and Caucasian wars.

Slide 11
Most of the winding, fine sand paths between the two main springs were lined with climbing vines on frames that wove over the heads of pedestrians. There are flower beds between the paths with benches. Young oaks and ash trees predominated among the trees planted. Initially, the best viewing platform in the garden was the top of the Hot Mountain, and then the Aeolian Harp gazebo. The new garden was surrounded by a fence of thorny elk and high stone walls. During the creation of the garden, secondary mineral springs were discovered, which were named Averina, Nelyubin, Tovia, Georgiy and Achilles. These springs were lined with cut stone in the form of beautiful water cascades. Georgievsky Spring was named in honor of General Georgy Emanuel. The Tovia spring received its name in honor of the governor of the Alexander Nevsky Lavra, Archimandrite Tovia (Tikhon Moiseev), who was successfully treated by him in the summer of 1828. Next to this spring, a wooden gazebo with benches was built for the archimandrite at the same time. Subsequently, the baths located in the left wing of the Elizabethan Gallery were named after this popular source among the people. The new public garden in 1832 was named Emanuelevsky. This garden and its attractions (Aeolian harp, grottoes, etc.) became the place where the events of Lermontov’s story “Princess Mary” unfolded.

Slide 12
In the autumn of 1853, young Leo Tolstoy sometimes came to this shady park, writing chapters of the stories “Adolescence” and “Cossacks”. So, in his diary dated September 12, 1853, he wrote: “Tomorrow morning I’ll go to the park and think about the chapter...”.

Slide 13
This vast garden is now known to all Pyatigorsk residents as the city Park of Culture and Leisure named after S. M. Kirov.
State Garden (Dunaevskogo St., 5)

Slide 14
Diana's Grotto (Tsvetnik Park)
In the southern part of the Tsvetnik park there is a shady, cool grotto called Diana’s Grotto. This is one of the oldest and most famous attractions of Pyatigorsk. In the 1810s, a walking path with stairs leading to the main Alexander Baths on Goryachaya Gora began from here.
In the summer of 1829, General G. A. Emanuel undertook a military expedition to the foot of Elbrus. The military and scientific expedition to the foot of Elbrus was successful. But its most unexpected result was the first officially registered human ascent of Elbrus. Emanuel probably planned to return to the camp at the foot of Elbrus in the near future. However, the difficulties associated with delivering the slabs to remote places prompted the idea of ​​installing them at Hot Waters, building an artificial triumphal grotto in the shape of Mount Elbrus. However, General Emanuel suddenly abandoned the “double-headed peak” and soon ordered the new structure to be called Diana’s Grotto. According to ancient myths, the goddess Diana preferred to relax in shady grottoes on hot days after swimming.

Slide 15
Ermolovskie baths (Kirova Ave., 21)
The building, made of pine beams on a stone foundation, had the shape of a cross in plan, the ends of which were decorated with wide pediments. In the center of the iron roof was a belvedere. The building had many high semi-circular windows. Spacious galleries adjoined the northern and southern facades. A convenient highway was built along the mountainside for the access of patients in carriages (now it passes over Diana’s grotto).

Slide 16
Mikhailovskaya Gallery (Gagarin Boulevard, 2)
Among the trees of the ancient park behind the Academic Gallery there is a long structure with fancy windows and turrets. In 1824, Dr. F. P. Conradi began to recommend a small “sulfur-salt” spring of a pinkish hue and with the taste of fresh milk, gushing upward like a gurgling fountain from a hole in the travertine for drinking and giving it the name Mikhailovsky, in honor of Grand Duke Mikhail Pavlovich (1798 -1849), younger brother of the then Emperor Alexander I.

Slide 17
On Kabardian settlement No. 252
Tolstoy reports this address of his residence in a letter to his beloved aunt, T. Ergolskaya. The address, as we see, is indicated extremely accurately, and, at first glance, finding the house where the writer rented an apartment is not at all difficult.
There were a lot of people interested, especially among visitors with low incomes - apartments in the suburb were much cheaper than in the city center. Well, living conditions got better over time. As we know, Lev Nikolaevich anticipated Vereshchagin’s advice, because he did not have much money. He describes his home like this in the story “What Happened to Bulka in Pyatigorsk”: “The city itself stands on a mountain, and under the mountain there is a settlement. I lived in this settlement, in a small house. The house stood in the courtyard and in front of the windows there was a garden, and in the garden there were the owner’s bees - not in logs, as in Russia, but in round baskets.” Well, where was this house located? Unfortunately, the current procedure for designating houses, which have their own numbers on each street, does not coincide with the way it used to be, when all houses in the city had a single numbering. Therefore, finding number 252 today seems absolutely impossible. Most local historians only point out that Tolstoy lived at the very foot of Mount Goryachaya and that supposedly from his yard snowy mountains were visible on the horizon. And the famous L. Polsky, who was more thoroughly searching for this house, adds that it was supposedly located “near the bridge over Podkumok, on Teplosernaya Street.”

Slide 18
Elizabethan Gallery (Beginning of Kirov Ave.)
At the very beginning of Kirov Avenue, in the ravine between the Mikhailovsky spur and Goryachaya Gora there is a long white-stone arched building of the Academic Gallery, which fits well into the surrounding rocky landscape both from a great distance and from above looks like a long bridge or aqueduct. The very first drinking spring of the resort was once located here.
By the time Tolstoy arrived in Pyatigorsk, on the site of the Elizavetinsky spring, instead of a canvas canopy for festivities, the magnificent building of the Elizavetinskaya Gallery appeared.

Slide 19
House of Doctor Drozdov (Kirova Ave., 9)
At the beginning of Kirova Ave., two houses below the Pushkin Baths, there is one of the oldest residential buildings in Pyatigorsk, on the wall of which there is a memorial plaque about the visit of this house by the young Count Leo Tolstoy.

Slide 20
In the summer of 1853, doctor Drozdov’s patient was the young cadet Count L.N. Tolstoy, the future world-famous writer. He visited the Drozdovs' house and played four-hand pieces on the piano with their daughter. Leaving Pyatigorsk, Tolstoy gave the doctor Drozdov a telescope. Later, Klavdiya Drozdova, married to Lyubomirskaya, became a famous pianist. After the death of the Drozdovs, the house passed to the former tenant of the state-owned Restoration, Odessa resident Karuta. He built a new building in the courtyard of the house with furnished rooms, which in the 1880s were very popular among visitors to the Waters. At the end of the 19th century, the house was owned by Princess E.I. Sultan-Girey. After the revolution, a number of communal apartments were built in the buildings of the former Drozdov estate. Nowadays the old house is in private ownership. In 1988, a memorial plaque was mounted on the wall of the house in memory of L. N. Tolstoy’s visit to it. They planned to set up a local Tolstoy museum here.

Slide 21
On November 10 (23), 1910, the writer was buried in Yasnaya Polyana, in the forest, on the edge of a ravine, where as a child he and his brother were looking for the “green stick” that held the “secret” of how to make all people happy.
Tolstoy Lev Nikolaevich (1828 - 1910) Russian writer, prose writer, count.


Caucasus

in life

and creativity

L.N. Tolstoy

Work completed

student of class 10 "A"

MKOU secondary school No. 6, Zaterechny village

Kislyakova Elena

Head – Krayushkina I.V.



HYPOTHESIS : The Caucasus had a great influence on the formation of the personality of L. N. Tolstoy, which is reflected in his work

GOALS :

  • to find out the influence of his stay in the Caucasus on the worldview of Leo Tolstoy,
  • determine how the theme of the Caucasus was reflected in his work

METHODS : search for additional material, analysis, synthesis.


MY RESEARCH:

  • Leo Tolstoy's stay in the Caucasus.
  • Interest in folklore and life of the Caucasians.
  • Caucasian cycle of his work.

CONCLUSION:


I FOUND OUT :

In the forties of the 19th century - during the period of the rise of Russian democratic thought - Tolstoy came to the Caucasus as a young officer. He lived in Chechnya from May 1851 to January 1854 - almost constantly among the Chechens and Cossacks, among whom he made many friends. In the diaries and letters of this period there is evidence of Tolstoy’s deep interest in the life of the Chechens. He sought to “understand the spiritual structure of local peoples,” their morals and customs, and make his own judgments.

Tolstoy undoubtedly looked back and perceived Pushkin and Lermontov as his predecessors. He spoke about his love for the Caucasus in 1854 in expressions that literally coincided with Lermontov’s poems (from the introduction to “Ishmael Bey”): “I am beginning to love the Caucasus, albeit with a posthumous, but strong love.”

Tolstoy wrote in 1859 about the influence of the Caucasus on his life and work: “... It was both a painful and good time. Never, neither before nor after, have I reached such a height of thought as at that time... And everything that I found then will forever remain my conviction.”

I FOUND OUT :

In 1852, he recorded two Chechen folk songs - from the words of his Chechen friends Sado Misirbiev and Balta Isaev. He subsequently used these and other recordings in his works.

In December 1852, Tolstoy sent his first military story, “The Raid,” from the Caucasus to the St. Petersburg magazine Sovremennik, the progressive most popular magazine of that time. Before that, the story “Childhood” was published in the September issue of the magazine. When Tolstoy’s next Caucasian story, “Cutting the Forest,” appeared in Sovremennik, the editor of the magazine, N. A. Nekrasov, wrote to I. S. Turgenev; “Do you know what this is? These are essays on various types of soldiers (and partly officers), that is, a thing hitherto unprecedented in Russian literature. And how good!”


I DEFINED:

During his years of service in the Caucasus, Tolstoy paid a lot of attention to the collection and promotion of North Caucasian oral folk art and the publication of Chechen folklore.

Love for the Caucasus and deep interest in the peculiarities of the life of the highlanders were reflected in many of Tolstoy’s works.

Tolstoy’s thoughts about the fate of the highlanders formed the basis of the Caucasian cycle of his work (“Raid. The Story of a Volunteer”, “Cutting Wood. The Story of a Junker”, “From Caucasian Memoirs. Demoted”, “Notes of a Marker”, “Notes about the Caucasus. Trip to Mamakai- Yurt").

In the Caucasus, Tolstoy saw war and people at war with his own eyes. Here he learned how peasant life could be arranged without serfdom depending on the landowner.


I DEFINED:

In the Caucasian stories, the writer's general view of life, of war and the world was formed - in other words, the philosophy of existence, embodied in artistic images. War and peace are sharply opposed, and war is condemned, because it is destruction, death, separation of people, their enmity with each other, with the beauty of the entire “God’s world.”

In the Caucasus, Tolstoy's philosophy of love and selflessness was first developed - and these are the most cherished feelings of the Russian person.

CONCLUSION: GENERAL CONCLUSION -

The Caucasus had a great influence on the formation of the writer’s views and was reflected in his work.


RESOURCES:

  • http://elbrusoid.org/content/liter_theatre/p137294.shtml - Songs of the Highlanders
  • Independent newspaper from 06/01/2001 Original: http://www.ng.ru/style/2001-06-01/16_song.html
  • "Tales and Stories" LN Tolstoy, Moscow, "Fiction", 1981, series "Classics and Contemporaries".
  • "Leo Tolstoy", an essay on life and work; K.N. Lomunov, 2nd edition, Moscow, ed. "Children's Literature", 1984
  • K. Kuliev “The poet is always with people”, M., 1986

Slide 2

TEST

1 The events took place in the fall. 2. Zhilin was short in stature, but brave. 3. Zhilin was captured because Kostylin abandoned him. 4. The Tatars asked for a ransom for Zhilin in the amount of 500 rubles. 5. Zhilin wrote the wrong address and ran away. 6. In captivity, Zhilin was sad, bored and waiting for ransom. 7. During the first escape, Kostylin showed himself to be a weak man. 8. The second time Zhilin fled alone. 9. During his escape, Dina and Russian soldiers helped him. 10. After the escape, he remained to serve in the Caucasus, but did not go on vacation

Slide 3

Task 1: “Find the pages where the difference between Zhilin and Kostylin is most clearly visible. Title these episodes."

Slide 4

Illustrations

  • Slide 5

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    Slide 8

    TASK 2: Briefly highlight the main qualities that determine the appearance of the heroes.

    The main qualities of the heroes Zhilin Kostylin Having a great goal Selfishness Activity Irresponsibility Loyalty to duty Effeminacy Loyalty to friendship Lack of will Ability to betray

    Slide 9

    CROSSWORD

    Horizontally: 1.What character trait should a person have in captivity? 2. “...left, you can’t do anything with one checker” 3. What feeling does Zhilin experience when he writes the wrong address on a letter? 4.What did the Tatars call Zilina? 5. 6.What character trait that Kostylin does not have can be noted in Zhilin? 7. The main goal of Zhilin is in captivity. 8. An officer served in the Caucasus, “an overweight, fat man.” 9. What did the Tatars call Kostylin? Vertically: 1. What feeling does Kostylin make on you? 2. Kostylin, both in captivity and during the escape, turned out to be for Zhilin 3. Zhilin is characterized by activity, Kostylin ... 4. What does Zhilin experience in relation to Kostylin during the escape? 5. Zhilin already fed her (whom) in advance