Brief plot of the fairy tale The Scarlet Flower. The Scarlet Flower. Similar tales

« The Scarlet Flower» - a fairy tale written down by him “from the words of the housekeeper Pelageya.” One of the many variations of the "Beauty and the Beast" plot.

“The Scarlet Flower” summary

A rich merchant goes to trade in overseas countries. Before leaving, he asks his daughters what to bring them. The eldest asks for a golden crown with gems, which will make the night as light as day. The middle daughter asks for a mirror, looking into which the girl does not age, but becomes more and more beautiful. The youngest daughter asks for a scarlet flower, the most beautiful one in this world. The merchant promises the two older daughters to get their gifts, and the younger daughter - just try to find such a flower.

Having sold the goods, but not finding a flower for his daughter, the merchant returns home with his servants and gifts for his older daughters. On the way, the merchant and his servants are attacked by robbers. Abandoning caravans and servants, the merchant runs away from the robbers into a dense forest.

In the forest he sees a luxurious palace. Entering the palace, he sits down at the table, on which beautiful dishes and wines appear of their own accord. After dinner, an overnight stay and breakfast, he decides to take a walk in the garden around the palace and sees a scarlet flower of unprecedented beauty. Realizing that in front of him is the very flower that his daughter asked for, the merchant plucks it. Then an angry monster appears - the owner of the palace. Because the merchant picked his favorite flower, the joy of his life, the monster sentences the merchant to death. The merchant talks about his daughter’s request, and then the monster agrees to let the merchant go with a flower, giving him a rich gift, with the condition that one of his daughters should voluntarily come to him and live next to him in honor and freedom. If within three days If none of the daughters wants to go to the palace, then the merchant must return himself, and then he will be executed. Having agreed, the merchant receives a gold ring: whoever puts it on his right little finger will be transported wherever he wishes.

The merchant puts on the ring and finds himself at home. His caravans with servants enter the gates, and they carry goods and treasury three times as much as before. The merchant gives gifts to his daughters. The older daughters rejoice, and the younger daughter cries. In the evening, guests arrive and the feast begins. During the feast, silver and gold dishes spontaneously appear with such dishes that they have never seen. The next day, the merchant tells his daughters about what happened and invites each of them to go to the monster. The eldest daughters flatly refuse to go, saying “let that daughter help out her father, for whom he got the scarlet flower.” The youngest daughter agrees, says goodbye to her father, puts on the ring and finds herself in the monster’s palace.

In the palace, the merchant's daughter lives in luxury, and all her wishes are immediately fulfilled. The invisible owner of the palace assures that he considers her his mistress, and the girl in response says kind words to him. First, he communicates with her through fiery letters appearing on the wall, then with a voice heard in the gazebo. Gradually the girl gets used to his scary, wild voice. Yielding to the girl’s insistent requests, the monster shows himself to her (giving her the ring and allowing her to return if she wishes), and soon the girl gets used to his ugly appearance. The merchant's daughter and the monster are walking, having affectionate conversations. One day a girl dreams that her father is sick. The owner of the palace invites his beloved to return home, but warns that he cannot live without her, so if she does not return in three days, he will die.

Returning home, the girl tells her father and sisters about her have a wonderful life in a palace. The father is happy for his daughter, but the sisters are jealous and persuade her not to return, but she does not give in to persuasion. Then the sisters change the clocks, as a result, their younger sister is late for the palace and finds the monster dead. The girl hugs the monster’s head and shouts that she loves him as a desired groom. As soon as she utters these words, lightning begins to strike, thunder rumbles and the earth begins to shake. The merchant's daughter faints, and when she wakes up, she finds herself on the throne with the prince, a handsome man. The prince says that he was turned into an ugly monster by an evil sorceress. He had to be a monster until there was a red maiden, no matter what her family and rank, who would love him in the form of a monster and wish to be his legal wife. He lived in the form of a monster for thirty years, got eleven red maidens into his palace, but not one of them fell in love with him for his caresses, pleasing and kind soul. Only she, the twelfth, fell in love with the prince, and as a reward for this she will be the queen. The merchant gives his blessing, and his daughter and the prince get married.

Once upon a time there lived a rich merchant and he had 3 beautiful daughters, and the youngest was his favorite. He began to gather on trade matters overseas. He called his daughters and asked: “What should I bring you as a gift?” The eldest asked for a golden crown made of semi-precious stones, so that there would be light from them; the middle toilet is made of oriental crystal, so that looking at it does not make you grow old, but adds to your beauty; the youngest is a scarlet flower, the most beautiful of which could not be in the world. The merchant set off on his journey. He sells his goods at exorbitant prices, buys others at exorbitant prices, “exchanges goods for goods with the addition of silver and gold.”

He bought gifts for the eldest and middle ones, but not for the youngest. He saw scarlet flowers, but he didn’t know if they were the most beautiful ones in the world. On the way home, robbers attacked. The merchant ran away into the forest (better to be torn to pieces by animals than captured). He walked through the forest and saw: a palace in fire, silver, gold. I went into it, and everything there was decorated, richly. The merchant went for a walk through the strange gardens and saw a scarlet flower, the most beautiful of which is none. He tore it off and in an instant a terrible, shaggy monster appeared. It sent the merchant home, but he or his daughter had to return of their own free will. The monster gave him a ring. The merchant put it on his right little finger and found himself at home. I told my daughters everything. Daughters: “Let that daughter help her father for whom he picked the scarlet flower.” The youngest daughter put the ring on her right little finger and instantly found herself in a rich palace. She lived well there, but she wanted to see and hear the monster. The monster agreed, but Nastenka almost killed him.

The sisters were jealous that Nastenka lived in wealth, and they turned all the clocks back and closed the shutters. At the right time, Nastenka’s heart sank. Without waiting a minute (according to the house clock), she returned to the palace. And the animal lay dead near the scarlet flower. “You get up, wake up, I love you like my desired groom!” And the monster turned into a young prince: “I fell in love for my good soul, for my love.” (He was bewitched: an evil sorceress cursed his father and stole the prince when he was still small). He was bewitched for 30 years. And during this time 11 girls arrived, but they all ran away.

He and Nastenka got married and lived happily ever after.

This is the author’s interpretation of Aksakov’s story “Beauty and the Beast”. The youngest merchant's daughter asked me to bring her a wonderful scarlet flower as a gift. This wonderful plant grew only in the monster’s garden. The merchant tore out the flower, and in return had to send his daughter to the monster. The girl's love was able to disenchant the monster, who was actually a prince.

Fairy tale The Scarlet Flower download:

Fairy tale The Scarlet Flower read

In a certain kingdom, in a certain state, there lived a rich merchant, an eminent man.

He had a lot of all kinds of wealth, expensive overseas goods, pearls, precious stones, gold and silver treasury; and that merchant had three daughters, all three beautiful, and the youngest was the best; and he loved his daughters more than all his wealth, pearls, precious stones, gold and silver treasury - for the reason that he was a widower, and he had no one to love; He loved the older daughters, but he loved the younger daughter more, because she was better than everyone else and was more affectionate towards him.

So that merchant is going on his trade affairs overseas, to distant lands, to the distant kingdom, to the thirtieth state, and he says to his dear daughters:

My dear daughters, my good daughters, my beautiful daughters, I am going on my merchant business to distant lands, to the distant kingdom, the thirtieth state, and you never know, how much time I travel - I don’t know, and I punish you to live without me honestly and peacefully, and if you live without me honestly and peacefully, then I will bring you such gifts as you yourself want, and I will give you three days to think, and then you will tell me what kind of gifts you want.

They thought for three days and three nights, and came to their parent, and he began to ask them what gifts they wanted. The eldest daughter bowed to her father’s feet and was the first to say to him:

Sir, you are my dear father! Do not bring me gold and silver brocade, nor black sable furs, nor Burmita pearls, but bring me a golden crown of semi-precious stones, and so that there will be such light from them as from a full month, as from the red sun, and so that there is It is light in a dark night, as in the middle of a white day.

The honest merchant thought for a moment and then said:

Well, my dear, good and pretty daughter, I will bring you such a crown; I know a man overseas who will get me such a crown; and one overseas princess has it, and it is hidden in a stone storage room, and that storage room is located in a stone mountain, three fathoms deep, behind three iron doors, behind three German locks. The work will be considerable: yes, for my treasury there is no opposite.

The middle daughter bowed at his feet and said:

Sir, you are my dear father! Don’t bring me gold and silver brocade, nor black Siberian sable furs, nor a necklace of Burmitz pearls, nor a golden crown of semi-precious stones, but bring me a tovalet made of oriental crystal, solid, immaculate, so that, looking into it, I can see all the beauty under heaven and so that, looking at it, I would not grow old and my girlish beauty would increase.

The honest merchant became thoughtful and, after thinking for who knows how long, he says to her these words:

Okay, my dear, good and pretty daughter, I’ll get you such a crystal toilette; and the daughter of the king of Persia, a young princess, has an indescribable, indescribable and unknown beauty; and that Tuvalet was buried in a high stone mansion, and he stood on a stone mountain, the height of that mountain was three hundred fathoms, behind seven iron doors, behind seven German locks, and there were three thousand steps leading up to that mansion, and on each step stood a warrior Persian, day and night, with a damask saber, and the princess carries the keys to those iron doors on her belt. I know such a man overseas, and he will get me such a toilet. Your work as a sister is harder, but for my treasury there is no opposite.

The youngest daughter bowed at her father’s feet and said this:

Sir, you are my dear father! Don’t bring me gold and silver brocade, nor black Siberian sables, nor a Burmita necklace, nor a semi-precious crown, nor a crystal toilette, but bring me a scarlet flower, which would not be more beautiful in this world.

The honest merchant thought more deeply than before. Whether he spent a lot of time thinking or not, I can’t say for certain; having thought about it, he kisses, caresses, caresses his youngest daughter, his beloved, and says these words:

Well, you gave me a harder job than my sisters; If you know what to look for, then how not to find it, but how to find something that you yourself don’t know? It’s not hard to find a scarlet flower, but how can I know that there is nothing more beautiful in this world? I will try, but don’t ask for a gift.

And he sent his daughters, good and handsome, to their maiden houses. He began to get ready to hit the road, to the distant lands overseas. How long it took, how much he planned, I don’t know and don’t know: soon the fairy tale is told, but not soon the deed is done. He went on his way, down the road.

Here an honest merchant travels to foreign lands overseas, to unprecedented kingdoms; he sells his goods at exorbitant prices, buys others at exorbitant prices; he exchanges goods for goods and more, with the addition of silver and gold; Loads ships with golden treasury and sends them home. He found a treasured gift for his eldest daughter: a crown with semi-precious stones, and from them it is light on a dark night, as if on a white day. He also found a treasured gift for his middle daughter: a crystal toilette, and in it all the beauty of heaven is visible, and, looking into it, a girl’s beauty does not age, but increases. He just can’t find the treasured gift for his youngest, beloved daughter - a scarlet flower, which would not be more beautiful in this world.

He found in the gardens of the kings, royals and sultans many scarlet flowers of such beauty that he could neither tell a fairy tale nor write them down with a pen; Yes, no one gives him guarantee that there is no more beautiful flower in this world; and he himself doesn’t think so. Here he is traveling along the road with his faithful servants through the shifting sands, through dense forests, and out of nowhere, robbers, Busurmans, Turkish and Indians, flew at him, and, seeing the inevitable trouble, the honest merchant abandoned his rich caravans with his servants faithful and runs into the dark forests. “Let me be torn to pieces by fierce beasts, rather than fall into the hands of filthy robbers and live out my life in captivity, in captivity.”

He wanders through that dense forest, impassable, impenetrable, and as he goes further, the road becomes better, as if the trees part before him, and the frequent bushes move apart. He looks back - he can’t stick his hands in, he looks to the right - there are stumps and logs, he can’t get past the sideways hare, he looks to the left - and even worse. The honest merchant marvels, thinks he can’t figure out what kind of miracle is happening to him, but he goes on and on: the road is rough under his feet. He walks day by day from morning to evening, he does not hear the roar of an animal, nor the hiss of a snake, nor the cry of an owl, nor the voice of a bird: everything around him has died out. Now the dark night has come; All around him it would be prickly to poke out his eyes, but under his feet there is little light. So he walked, almost until midnight, and began to see a glow ahead, and he thought: “Apparently, the forest is burning, so why should I go there to certain death, inevitable?”

He turned back - he couldn’t go; to the right, to the left, you cannot go; leaned forward - the road was rough. “Let me stand in one place - maybe the glow will go in the other direction, or away from me, or it will go out completely.”

So he stood there, waiting; but that was not the case: the glow seemed to be coming towards him, and it seemed to be getting lighter around him; he thought and thought and decided to go forward. Two deaths cannot happen, but one cannot be avoided. The merchant crossed himself and went forward. The further you go, the brighter it becomes, and it almost became like white day, and you can’t hear the noise and crackling of a fireman. At the end he comes out into a wide clearing, and in the middle of that wide clearing stands a house, not a house, a palace, not a palace, but a royal or royal palace, all on fire, in silver and gold and in semi-precious stones, all burning and shining, but there is no fire to be seen ; The sun is exactly red, it’s hard for the eyes to look at it. All the windows in the palace are open, and consonant music is playing in it, such as he has never heard.

He enters a wide courtyard, through a wide, open gate; the road was made of white marble, and on the sides there were fountains of water, tall, large and small. He enters the palace along a staircase covered with crimson cloth and with gilded railings; entered the upper room - there was no one; in another, in a third - there is no one; at the fifth, tenth, there is no one; and the decoration everywhere is royal, unheard of and unprecedented: gold, silver, oriental crystal, ivory and mammoth.

The honest merchant marvels at such unspeakable wealth, and doubly marvels at the fact that there is no owner; not only the owner, but also no servants; and the music doesn’t stop playing; and at that time he thought to himself: “Everything is fine, but there is nothing to eat,” and a table grew up in front of him, cleared away: in gold and silver dishes there were sugar dishes, and foreign wines, and honey drinks. He sat down at the table without hesitation: he got drunk, ate his fill, because he had not eaten for a whole day; the food is such that it’s impossible to say anything, and suddenly you swallow your tongue, and he, walking through the forests and sands, is very hungry; He got up from the table, and there was no one to bow to and say thank you for the bread and for the salt. Before he had time to get up and look around, the table with food was gone, and the music was playing incessantly.

The honest merchant marvels at such a wonderful miracle and such a wondrous marvel, and he walks through the decorated chambers and admires them, and he himself thinks: “It would be nice to sleep and snore now,” and he sees a carved bed standing in front of him, made of pure gold, on crystal legs , with a silver canopy, with fringe and pearl tassels; the down jacket lies on her like a mountain, soft, swan-like down.

The merchant marvels at such a new, new and wonderful miracle; He lies down on the high bed, draws the silver curtains and sees that it is thin and soft, as if made of silk. It became dark in the room, just like twilight, and the music was playing as if from afar, and he thought: “Oh, if only I could see my daughters in my dreams!” - and fell asleep at that very moment.

The merchant wakes up, and the sun has already risen above the standing tree. The merchant woke up, and suddenly he couldn’t come to his senses: all night he saw in a dream his kind, good and beautiful daughters, and he saw his eldest daughters: the eldest and the middle, that they were cheerful and cheerful, and only the youngest daughter, his beloved, was sad; that the eldest and middle daughters have rich suitors and that they are going to get married without waiting for his father’s blessing; the youngest daughter, her beloved, a written beauty, does not want to hear about suitors until her dear father returns. And his soul felt both joyful and joyless.

He got up from the high bed, his dress was all prepared, and a fountain of water beats into a crystal bowl; he gets dressed, washes himself and no longer marvels at the new miracle: tea and coffee are on the table, and there is a sugar snack with them. Having prayed to God, he ate something to eat and began to walk around the chambers again to admire them again in the light of the red sun. Everything seemed better to him than yesterday. Now he sees through the open windows that around the palace there are strange, fruitful gardens, and flowers are blooming of indescribable beauty. He wanted to take a walk through those gardens.

He goes down another staircase, made of green marble, copper malachite, with gilded railings, and goes straight into the green gardens. He walks and admires: ripe, rosy fruits hang on the trees, just asking to be put into his mouth; Indo, looking at them, his mouth waters; the flowers are blooming, beautiful, double, fragrant, painted with all sorts of colors, unprecedented birds are flying: as if lined with gold and silver on green and crimson velvet, they are singing heavenly songs; fountains of water gush high, and when you look at their height, your head falls back; and the spring springs run and rustle along the crystal decks.

An honest merchant walks around and marvels; His eyes widened at all such wonders, and he didn’t know what to look at or who to listen to. He walked for so long, or for how little time - we don’t know: soon the fairy tale is told, but not soon the deed is done. And suddenly he sees a scarlet flower blooming on a green hillock, a beauty unseen and unheard of, which cannot be said in a fairy tale or written with a pen. The honest merchant's spirit takes over; he approaches that flower; the scent from the flower flows in a steady stream throughout the garden; The merchant’s arms and legs began to shake, and he said in a joyful voice:

Here is a scarlet flower, the most beautiful in this world, which my youngest, beloved daughter asked me for.

And, having uttered these words, he came up and picked a scarlet flower. At that same moment, without any clouds, lightning flashed and thunder struck, and the earth began to shake under his feet - and rose, as if from under the ground, in front of the merchant: a beast is not a beast, a man is not a man, but some kind of monster, terrible and shaggy, and he roared in a wild voice:

What did you do? How dare you pluck my reserved, favorite flower from my garden? I treasured him more than the apple of my eye and every day I was consoled by looking at him, but you deprived me of all the joy in my life. I am the owner of the palace and garden, I received you as a dear guest and invitee, fed you, gave you something to drink and put you to bed, and somehow you paid for my goods? Know your bitter fate: you will die an untimely death for your guilt!..

May you die an untimely death!

The honest merchant's fear made him lose his temper; he looked around and saw that from all sides, from under every tree and bush, from the water, from the ground, an unclean and countless force was crawling towards him, all ugly monsters.

He fell to his knees before his greatest owner, the furry monster, and said in a plaintive voice:

Oh, you, honest sir, beast of the forest, miracle of the sea: how to call you - I don’t know, I don’t know! Do not destroy my Christian soul for my innocent audacity, do not order me to be chopped down and executed, order me to say a word. And I have three daughters, three beautiful daughters, good and pretty; I promised to bring them a gift: for the eldest daughter - a gem crown, for the middle daughter - a crystal toilette, and for the youngest daughter - a scarlet flower, no matter what is more beautiful in this world. I found gifts for the older daughters, but I could not find gifts for the younger daughter; I saw such a gift in your garden - a scarlet flower, the most beautiful in this world, and I thought that such a rich, rich, glorious and powerful owner would not feel sorry for the scarlet flower that my youngest daughter, my beloved, asked for. I repent of my guilt before Your Majesty. Forgive me, unreasonable and stupid, let me go to my dear daughters and give me a scarlet flower as a present for my youngest, beloved daughter. I will pay you the gold treasury that you demand.

Laughter rang through the forest, as if thunder had thundered, and the beast of the forest, the miracle of the sea, said to the merchant:

I don’t need your golden treasury: I have nowhere to put mine. There is no mercy for you from me, and my faithful servants will tear you into pieces, into small pieces. There is one salvation for you. I will let you go home unharmed, I will reward you with countless treasury, I will give you a scarlet flower, if you give me your word of honor as a merchant and a note from your hand that you will send in your place one of your good, handsome daughters; I will not do her any harm, and she will live with me in honor and freedom, just as you yourself lived in my palace. I'm getting bored of living alone, and I want to get a friend.

So the merchant fell on the damp ground, shedding burning tears; and he will look at the forest beast, at the miracle of the sea, and he will remember his daughters, good, beautiful, and even more than that, he will scream in a heart-rending voice: the forest beast, the miracle of the sea, was painfully terrible.

For a long time, the honest merchant is killed and sheds tears, and he says in a plaintive voice:

Mister honest, beast of the forest, miracle of the sea! But what should I do if my daughters, good and handsome, do not want to come to you of their own free will? Should I not tie their hands and feet and send them by force? And how can I get there? I have been traveling to you for exactly two years, but to what places, along what paths, I don’t know.

The beast of the forest, the miracle of the sea, will speak to the merchant:

I don’t want a slave; let your daughter come here out of love for you, of her own will and desire; and if your daughters do not go of their own free will and desire, then come yourself, and I will order you to be executed with a cruel death. How to come to me is not your problem; I will give you a ring from my hand: whoever puts it on his right little finger will find himself wherever he wants in an instant. I give you time to stay at home for three days and three nights.

The merchant thought and thought and came up with a strong thought: “It’s better for me to see my daughters, give them my parental blessing, and if they don’t want to save me from death, then prepare to die out of Christian duty and return to the forest beast, the miracle of the sea.” There was no falsehood on his mind, and therefore he told what was on his thoughts. The forest beast, the miracle of the sea, already knew them; Seeing his truth, he did not even take the note from him, but took the gold ring from his hand and gave it to the honest merchant.

And only the honest merchant managed to put it on his right little finger when he found himself at the gates of his wide courtyard; At that time, his rich caravans with faithful servants entered the same gate, and they brought treasury and goods three times as much as before. There was a noise and hubbub in the house, the daughters jumped up from behind their hoops, and they were embroidering silk flies in silver and gold; They began to kiss their father, be kind to him, and call him various affectionate names, and the two older sisters fawned over their little sister more than ever. They see that the father is somehow unhappy and that there is a hidden sadness in his heart. His elder daughters began to question him whether he had lost his great wealth; the younger daughter does not think about wealth, and she says to her parent:

I don’t need your riches; wealth is a matter of gain, but tell me your heartfelt grief.

And then the honest merchant will say to his dear, good and handsome daughters:

I did not lose my great wealth, but gained three or four times the treasury; But I have another sadness, and I will tell you about it tomorrow, and today we will have fun.

He ordered to bring traveling chests, bound with iron; He got his eldest daughter a golden crown, Arabian gold, does not burn in fire, does not rust in water, with semi-precious stones; takes out a gift for the middle daughter, a toilette for oriental crystal; takes out a gift for his youngest daughter, a golden jug with a scarlet flower. The eldest daughters went crazy with joy, took their gifts to the high towers and there, in the open air, amused themselves with them to their fill. Only the youngest daughter, my beloved, saw the scarlet flower, shook all over and began to cry, as if something had stung her in the heart.

As her father speaks to her, these are the words:

Well, my dear, beloved daughter, don’t you take your desired flower? There is nothing more beautiful in this world!

The youngest daughter took the scarlet flower just reluctantly, kisses her father’s hands, and she herself cries burning tears. Soon the older daughters came running, they tried their father’s gifts and could not come to their senses with joy. Then they all sat down at oak tables, at stained tablecloths, at sugar dishes, at honey drinks; They began to eat, drink, cool off, and console themselves with affectionate speeches.

In the evening the guests arrived in large numbers, and the merchant’s house became full of dear guests, relatives, saints, and hangers-on. The conversation continued until midnight, and such was the evening feast, such as the honest merchant had never seen in his house, and where it came from, he could not guess, and everyone marveled at it: gold and silver dishes and outlandish dishes, such as had never been seen in the house have not seen.

The next morning the merchant called to him eldest daughter, told her everything that had happened to him, everything from word to word, and asked if she wanted to save him from cruel death and go to live with the beast of the forest, with the miracle of the sea.

The eldest daughter flatly refused and said:

The honest merchant called his other daughter, the middle one, to his place, told her everything that had happened to him, everything from word to word, and asked if she wanted to save him from cruel death and go to live with the beast of the forest, the miracle of the sea.

The middle daughter flatly refused and said:

Let that daughter help out her father, for whom he got the scarlet flower.

The honest merchant called his youngest daughter and began to tell her everything, everything from word to word, and before he could finish his speech, the youngest daughter, his beloved, knelt before him and said:

Bless me, my lord, my dear father: I will go to the beast of the forest, the miracle of the sea, and I will live with him. You got a scarlet flower for me, and I need to help you out.

The honest merchant burst into tears, he hugged his youngest daughter, his beloved, and spoke to her these words:

My daughter is dear, good, pretty, smaller and beloved! May my parental blessing be upon you, that you rescue your father from a cruel death and, of your own free will and desire, go to live a life opposite to the terrible beast of the forest, the miracle of the sea. You will live in his palace, in great wealth and freedom; but where that palace is - no one knows, no one knows, and there is no way to it, neither on horseback, nor on foot, nor for a flying animal, nor for a migratory bird. There will be no hearing or news from you to us, and even less to you about us. And how can I live out my bitter life, not seeing your face, not hearing your kind words? I part with you forever and ever, and I bury you alive in the ground.

And the youngest, beloved daughter will say to her father:

Don’t cry, don’t be sad, my dear sir, my father: my life will be rich and free; the beast of the forest, the miracle of the sea, I will not be afraid, I will serve him with faith and truth, fulfill his master’s will, and maybe he will take pity on me. Don’t mourn me alive as if I were dead: maybe, God willing, I will return to you.

The honest merchant cries and sobs, but is not consoled by such speeches.

The older sisters, the big one and the middle one, came running and started crying all over the house: see, they feel so sorry for their little sister, their beloved; and the younger sister doesn’t even seem sad, doesn’t cry, doesn’t groan, and long journey the unknown is going. And he takes with him a scarlet flower in a gilded jug

The third day and third night passed, the time had come for the honest merchant to part, to part with his youngest, beloved daughter; he kisses, has mercy on her, pours burning tears on her and places his parental blessing on her on the cross. He takes out the ring of a forest beast, a miracle of the sea, from a forged casket, puts the ring on the right little finger of his youngest, beloved daughter - and at that very moment she was gone with all her belongings.

She found herself in the palace of the forest beast, the miracle of the sea, in tall stone chambers, on a bed of carved gold with crystal legs, on a down jacket of swan down, covered with golden damask, she did not move from her place, she lived here for a whole century, exactly went to bed and woke up. Consonantal music began to play, such as she had never heard in her life.

She got up from her downy bed and saw that all her belongings and a scarlet flower in a gilded jug were standing right there, laid out and arranged on green malachite copper tables, and that in that room there was a lot of goods and belongings of all kinds, there was something to sit and lie on, there was There is something to dress up in, something to look at. And there was one wall all mirrored, and another wall gilded, and the third wall all silver, and the fourth wall made of ivory and mammoth bones, all decorated with semi-precious yachts; and she thought: “This must be my bedchamber.”

She wanted to examine the whole palace, and she went to examine all its high chambers, and she walked for a long time, admiring all the wonders; one chamber was more beautiful than the other, and more and more beautiful than what the honest merchant, her dear sir, said. She took her favorite scarlet flower from a gilded jug, she went down into the green gardens, and the birds sang their songs of paradise to her, and the trees, bushes and flowers waved their tops and bowed down before her; fountains of water began to flow higher and the springs began to rustle louder, and she found that high place, an ant-like hillock, on which an honest merchant picked a scarlet flower, the most beautiful of which is not in this world. And she took that scarlet flower out of the gilded jug and wanted to plant it in its original place; but he himself flew out of her hands and grew to the old stem and blossomed more beautifully than before.

She marveled at such a wonderful miracle, a wondrous marvel, rejoiced at her scarlet, treasured flower, and went back to her palace chambers, and in one of them there was a table set, and only she thought: “Apparently, the beast of the forest, the miracle of the sea, is not angry with me.” , and he will be a merciful lord to me,” as fiery words appeared on the white marble wall:

“I am not your master, but an obedient slave. You are my mistress, and whatever you want, whatever comes to your mind, I will do with pleasure.”

She read the fiery words, and they disappeared from the white marble wall, as if they had never been there. And the thought dawned on her to write a letter to her parent and give him news about herself. Before she had time to think about it, she saw paper lying in front of her, a golden pen with an inkwell. She writes a letter to her dear father and her dear sisters:

“Don’t cry for me, don’t grieve, I live in the palace of the beast of the forest, the miracle of the sea, like a princess; I don’t see or hear him, but he writes to me on the white marble wall in fiery words; and he knows everything that I have in his thoughts, and at that very moment he does everything, and he does not want to be called my master, but calls me his mistress.”

Before she had time to write the letter and seal it, the letter disappeared from her hands and eyes, as if it had never been there. The music began to play louder than ever, sugar dishes, honey drinks, and all the utensils were made of red gold. She sat down at the table cheerfully, although she had never dined alone; she ate, drank, cooled off, and amused herself with music. After lunch, having eaten, she went to bed; the music began to play quietly and further away - for the reason that it would not disturb her sleep.

After sleep, she got up cheerfully and went for a walk again through the green gardens, because she didn’t have time to walk around half of them before lunch and look at all their wonders. All the trees, bushes and flowers bowed before her, and the ripe fruits - pears, peaches and juicy apples - climbed into her mouth. After walking for a considerable time, almost until the evening, she returned to her lofty chambers, and she saw: the table was set, and on the table there were sugar dishes and honey drinks, and all of them were excellent.

After dinner she entered that white marble chamber where she had read fiery words on the wall, and she again saw the same fiery words on the same wall:

“Is my lady satisfied with her gardens and chambers, food and servants?”

Don’t call me your mistress, but be always my kind master, affectionate and merciful. I will never step out of your will. Thank you for all your treats. Better than your lofty chambers and your green gardens cannot be found in this world: then how can I not be satisfied? I have never seen such miracles in my life. I still haven’t come to my senses from such a wonder, but I’m afraid to rest alone; in all your high chambers there is not a human soul.

Fiery words appeared on the wall:

“Don’t be afraid, my beautiful lady: you won’t rest alone, your hay girl is waiting for you, faithful and beloved; and there are many human souls in the chambers, but you don’t see or hear them, and all of them, together with me, take care of you and day and night: we will not let the wind blow on you, we will not let even a speck of dust settle.”

And the merchant’s young daughter, a beautiful woman, went to rest in her bedchamber, and saw: her hay girl, faithful and beloved, was standing by the bed, and she was standing almost alive from fear; and she rejoiced at her mistress and kisses her white hands, hugs her playful legs. The mistress was also happy with her, began to ask her about her dear father, about her older sisters and about all her maiden servants; after that she began to tell herself what happened to her at that time; They didn’t sleep until the white dawn.

And so the merchant’s young daughter, a beautiful woman, began to live and live. Every day new, rich outfits are ready for her, and decorations are such that they have no price, neither in a fairy tale nor in writing; every day there were new, excellent treats and fun: riding, walking with music in chariots without horses or harness through dark forests, and those forests parted in front of her and gave her a wide, wide and smooth road. And she began to do needlework, girlish needlework, embroidering flies with silver and gold and trimming fringes with fine pearls; she began to send gifts to her dear father, and gave the richest fly to her affectionate owner, and to that forest animal, a miracle of the sea; and day by day she began to go more often to the white marble hall, to speak kind words to her merciful master and to read on the wall his answers and greetings in fiery words.

You never know, how much time has passed: soon the fairy tale is told, but not soon the deed is done - the young merchant’s daughter, a written beauty, began to get used to her life; She no longer marvels at anything, is not afraid of anything; invisible servants serve her, serve her, receive her, ride her in chariots without horses, play music and carry out all her commands. And she loved her merciful master day after day, and she saw that it was not for nothing that he called her his mistress and that he loved her more than himself; and she wanted to listen to his voice, she wanted to have a conversation with him, without going into the white marble chamber, without reading fiery words.

She began to beg and ask him about it, but the beast of the forest, the miracle of the sea, did not quickly agree to her request, he was afraid of frightening her with his voice; she begged, she begged her kind owner, and he could not be opposite to her, and he wrote to her for the last time on the white marble wall in fiery words:

“Come today to the green garden, sit in your beloved gazebo, plaited with leaves, branches, flowers, and say this: “Talk to me, my faithful slave.”

And a little later, the merchant’s young daughter, a beautiful woman, ran into the green gardens, entered her beloved gazebo, plaited with leaves, branches, flowers, and sat down on a brocade bench; and she says breathlessly, her heart is beating like a caught bird, she says these words:

Do not be afraid, my kind and gentle lord, to frighten me with your voice: after all your mercies, I will not be afraid of the roar of an animal; speak to me without fear.

And she heard exactly who sighed behind the gazebo, and a terrible voice was heard, wild and loud, hoarse and hoarse, and even then he spoke in an undertone. At first the merchant’s young daughter, a beautiful woman, shuddered when she heard the voice of the forest beast, the miracle of the sea, but she only controlled her fear and did not show that she was afraid, and soon his kind and friendly words, his intelligent and reasonable speeches, she began to listen and listened, and her heart felt joyful.

From that time on, from that time on, they began to talk, almost all day long - in the green garden during festivities, in the dark forests during skating sessions, and in all the high chambers. Only the young merchant’s daughter, the written beauty, will ask:

Are you here, my good, beloved sir?

The forest beast, the miracle of the sea, answers:

Here, my beautiful lady, is your faithful slave, unfailing friend.

Little or much time has passed: soon the tale is told, the deed is not soon done, - the young daughter of the merchant, a written beauty, wanted to see with her own eyes the beast of the forest, the miracle of the sea, and she began to ask and beg him about it. He doesn’t agree to this for a long time, he’s afraid of scaring her, and he was such a monster that he couldn’t be said in a fairy tale or written down with a pen; not only people, but wild animals were always afraid of him and fled to their dens. And the beast of the forest, the miracle of the sea, spoke these words:

Don’t ask, don’t beg me, my beautiful lady, my beloved beauty, to show you my disgusting face, my ugly body. You have become accustomed to my voice; We live with you in friendship, harmony, honor each other, we are not separated, and you love me for my unspeakable love for you, and when you see me, terrible and disgusting, you will hate me, the unfortunate one, you will drive me out of sight, and in separation from you I will die of melancholy.

The young merchant's daughter, a beautiful woman, did not listen to such speeches, and began to beg more than ever, swearing that she would not be afraid of any monster in the world and that she would not stop loving her merciful master, and she spoke to him these words:

If you are an old man, be my grandfather, if Seredovich, be my uncle, if you are young, be my sworn brother, and while I am alive, be my dear friend.

For a long, long time, the forest animal, the miracle of the sea, did not succumb to such words, but could not resist the requests and tears of its beauty, and says this word to her:

I cannot be opposite to you for the reason that I love you more than myself; I will fulfill your desire, although I know that I will ruin my happiness and die an untimely death. Come to the green garden in the gray twilight, when the red sun sets behind the forest, and say: “Show yourself to me, true friend"-and I will show you my disgusting face, my ugly body. And if it becomes unbearable for you to stay with me any longer, I don’t want your bondage and eternal torment: you will find in your bedchamber, under your pillow, my gold ring. Put it on your right little finger - and you will find yourself with your dear father and will never hear anything about me.

The young merchant’s daughter, a real beauty, was not afraid, she was not intimidated, she firmly relied on herself. At that time, without hesitating a minute, she went into the green garden to wait for the appointed hour, and when the gray twilight came, the red sun sank behind the forest, she said: “Show yourself, my faithful friend!” - and from afar a forest beast, a miracle of the sea, appeared to her: it passed only across the road and disappeared in the thick bushes, and the merchant’s young daughter, a beautiful woman, did not see the light, clasped her white hands, screamed in a heart-rending voice and fell on the road without memory. Yes, and the beast of the forest was terrible, a miracle of the sea: crooked arms, animal nails on the hands, horse legs, great camel humps in front and back, all shaggy from top to bottom, boar tusks protruded from the mouth, a hooked nose like a golden eagle, and the eyes were owls. .

After lying there for how long, who knows how long, the young merchant’s daughter, a beautiful woman, came to her senses, and heard: someone was crying next to her, shedding burning tears and saying in a pitiful voice:

You have ruined me, my beautiful beloved, I will no longer see your beautiful face, you will not even want to hear me, and it has come for me to die an untimely death.

And she felt sorry and ashamed, and she mastered her great fear and her timid girlish heart, and she spoke in a firm voice:

No, do not be afraid of anything, my kind and gentle lord, I will not be more afraid of your terrible appearance, I will not be separated from you, I will not forget your mercies; Show yourself to me now in your same form: I was just scared for the first time.

A forest animal, a miracle of the sea, appeared to her, in its terrible, disgusting, ugly form, but it did not dare to come close to her, no matter how much she called him; They walked until the dark night and had the same conversations as before, affectionate and reasonable, and the merchant’s young daughter, a beautiful woman, did not sense any fear. The next day she saw a forest animal, a miracle of the sea, in the light of the red sun, and although at first she was frightened when she saw it, but did not show it, and soon her fear completely passed.

Here they began to talk more than ever: almost day after day, they were not separated, at lunch and dinner they ate sugar dishes, cooled off with honey drinks, walked through green gardens, rode without horses through dark forests.

And a lot of time has passed: soon the fairy tale is told, but not soon the deed is done. So one day, in a dream, a young merchant’s daughter, a beautiful woman, dreamed that her father was lying unwell; and an incessant melancholy fell upon her, and in that melancholy and tears the beast of the forest, the miracle of the sea, saw her, and began to spin violently and began to ask why she was in anguish and in tears? She told him her bad dream and began to ask him for permission to see her dear father and her dear sisters.

And the beast of the forest, the miracle of the sea, will speak to her:

And why do you need my permission? You have my gold ring, put it on your right little finger and you will find yourself in the house of your dear father. Stay with him until you get bored, and I’ll just tell you: if you don’t come back in exactly three days and three nights, then I won’t be in this world, and I’ll die that very minute for the reason that I love you more, than myself, and I can’t live without you.

She began to assure with cherished words and oaths that exactly an hour before three days and three nights she would return to his lofty chambers.

She said goodbye to her kind and merciful owner, put a gold ring on her right little finger and found herself in the wide courtyard of an honest merchant, her dear father. She goes to the high porch of his stone chambers; the servants and servants of the courtyard ran up to her and made noise and shouting; the kind sisters came running and, when they saw her, they were amazed at her maiden beauty and her royal, royal attire; The white men grabbed her by the arms and took her to her dear father, and the father lay unwell, unhealthy and joyless, remembering her day and night, shedding burning tears. And he did not remember with joy when he saw his dear, good, comely, younger, beloved daughter, and he marveled at her maiden beauty, her royal, royal attire.

They kissed for a long time, showed mercy, and consoled themselves with affectionate speeches. She told her dear father and her older, kind sisters, about her life with the beast of the forest, the miracle of the sea, everything from word to word, without hiding any crumbs. And the honest merchant rejoiced at her rich, royal, royal life, and marveled at how she was accustomed to looking at her terrible master and was not afraid of the beast of the forest, the miracle of the sea; He himself, remembering him, trembled in his trembling. The older sisters, hearing about the countless wealth of the younger sister and about her royal power over her master, as if over her slave, became envious.

A day passes like a single hour, another day passes like a minute, and on the third day the older sisters began to persuade the younger sister so that she would not return to the beast of the forest, the miracle of the sea. “Let him die, that’s his way...” And the dear guest, the younger sister, became angry with the older sisters, and said these words to them:

If I pay my kind and affectionate master for all his mercies and ardent, unspeakable love with his fierce death, then I will not be worth living in this world, and it is worth giving me away then wild animals to be torn to pieces.

And her father, an honest merchant, praised her for such good speeches, and it was ordered that, exactly one hour before the due date, she should return to the beast of the forest, the miracle of the sea, a good, comely, younger, beloved daughter. But the sisters were annoyed, and they conceived a cunning deed, a cunning and unkind deed: they took and set all the clocks in the house a whole hour ago, and the honest merchant and all his faithful servants, the courtyard servants, did not know this.

And when the real hour came, the young merchant’s daughter, a beautiful woman, began to have a pain and aching heart, something began to wash her away, and she looked every now and then at her father’s, English, German watches - but it was still too early for her to indulge in long journey. And the sisters talk to her, ask her about this and that, detain her. However, her heart could not bear it; the youngest daughter, beloved, written beauty, said goodbye to the honest merchant, her father, received the parental blessing from him, said goodbye to the older, dear sisters, to the faithful servants, the courtyard servants, and, without waiting a single minute before the appointed hour, put on the gold ring on the right little finger and found herself in a white-stone palace, in the high chambers of a forest beast, a miracle of the sea; and, marveling that he did not meet her, she cried out in a loud voice:

Where are you, my good sir, my faithful friend? Why don't you meet me? I returned before the appointed time, a whole hour and a minute.

There was no answer, no greeting, the silence was dead; in the green gardens the birds did not sing heavenly songs, the fountains of water did not gush and the springs did not rustle, and music did not play in the high chambers. The heart of the merchant's daughter, a beautiful woman, trembled; she sensed something unkind; She ran around the high chambers and green gardens, calling in a loud voice to her good master - there was no answer, no greeting and no voice of obedience anywhere. She ran to the anthill, where her favorite scarlet flower grew and adorned itself, and she saw that the forest animal, a miracle of the sea, was lying on the hillock, clasping the scarlet flower with its ugly paws. And it seemed to her that he had fallen asleep while waiting for her, and was now fast asleep. The merchant's daughter, a beautiful woman, began to wake him up little by little, but he did not hear; she began to wake him up, grabbed him by the furry paw - and saw that the forest animal, a miracle of the sea, was lifeless, lying dead...

Her clear eyes grew dim, her quick legs gave way, she fell to her knees, wrapped her white hands around the head of her good master, an ugly and disgusting head, and screamed in a heart-rending voice:

Get up, wake up, my dear friend, I love you like a desired groom!..

And as soon as she uttered these words, lightning flashed from all sides, the earth shook from great thunder, a stone thunder arrow struck the anthill, and the young merchant’s daughter, a beautiful woman, fell unconscious.

Whether she lay unconscious for how long or how long, I don’t know; only, having woken up, she sees herself in a high white marble chamber, she is sitting on a golden throne with precious stones, and a young prince, a handsome man, on his head with a royal crown, in gold-plated clothes, hugs her; in front of him stands his father and sisters, and around him a great retinue is kneeling, all dressed in brocades of gold and silver. And the young prince, a handsome man with a royal crown on his head, will speak to her:

You fell in love with me, beloved beauty, in the form of an ugly monster, for my kind soul and love for you; love me now in human form, be my desired bride. The evil sorceress was angry with my late parent, the glorious and mighty king, stole me, still a small child, and with her satanic witchcraft, with unclean power, turned me into a terrible monster and cast such a spell so that I could live in such an ugly, disgusting and terrible form for everyone man, for every creature of God, until there is a red maiden, no matter what her family and rank, who loves me in the form of a monster and wishes to be my lawful wife - and then the witchcraft will all end, and I will again become a young man as before and look pretty. And I lived as such a monster and a scarecrow for exactly thirty years, and I brought eleven red maidens into my enchanted palace, and you were the twelfth. Not a single one loved me for my caresses and pleases, for my kind soul.

You alone fell in love with me, a disgusting and ugly monster, for my caresses and pleasures, for my kind soul, for my unspeakable love for you, and for this you will be the wife of a glorious king, a queen in a mighty kingdom.

Then everyone marveled at this, the retinue bowed to the ground. The honest merchant gave his blessing to his youngest daughter, his beloved, and the young prince-royalty. And the elder, envious sisters, and all the faithful servants, the great boyars and the military cavaliers, congratulated the bride and groom, and without hesitation they began to have a merry feast and to the wedding, and began to live and live, make good money. I was there myself, I drank beer and honey, it flowed down my mustache, but it didn’t get into my mouth.

The fairy tale “The Scarlet Flower” by Aksakov was written in 1858 as an appendix to the writer’s autobiography “The Childhood Years of Bagrov the Grandson.” This is a very touching and at the same time instructive story about real feelings.

Main characters

Beautiful maiden– the youngest daughter of a merchant, a gentle, loving and devoted girl with a big heart.

monster- an enchanted prince, caring, honest.

Other characters

Merchant- a wealthy merchant, father of three daughters, a man of his word.

Elder merchant daughters– narcissistic, selfish and envious girls.

One day, “a rich merchant, an eminent man” decided to go to distant lands on his trade affairs. More than anything in the world, he loved his three daughters, and before leaving, he asked what to bring them from distant countries.

The eldest daughter asked to bring her a “golden crown of semi-precious stones”, the middle one - a large mirror “made of oriental crystal, solid, immaculate”, and the youngest daughter, the most beloved, asked the priest to give her “a scarlet flower, which would not be more beautiful in this world "

The merchant set off on a long journey. He successfully traded “in foreign countries overseas,” buying and exchanging various goods. He also found gifts for his eldest daughters, but for the youngest he could not find a beautiful flower. The merchant found “many scarlet flowers of such beauty that neither could be said in a fairy tale nor written with a pen,” but no one could promise him that there were no other flowers more beautiful than them in all white.

While on the way home, a merchant caravan was attacked by robbers. The merchant only miraculously managed to escape from the villains in the dense forest. He wandered around for a long time until he came out into a large, bright clearing, on which stood a palace “all in fire, in silver and gold and in semi-precious stones.”

The merchant entered the wide courtyard and admired the marble road, picturesque fountains, and “gilded railings.” He walked around almost the entire castle, but never met either its owners or servants.

The merchant was thinking that it would be nice to have some food, when a richly decorated table with the most luxurious dishes immediately appeared in front of him. Having satisfied his hunger, the merchant wanted to thank the owner for the treat, but he didn’t see anyone.

After a hearty lunch, the merchant wanted to lie down to rest, and at that very moment a “carved bed, made of pure gold, on crystal legs” appeared before his eyes. I saw my beloved daughters in a dream: the older daughters were happy and satisfied with life, and only the youngest suffered for her father.

Having rested well, the merchant decided to take a walk in the garden. He admired the trees with juicy fruits, strange birds and unusual flowers. Among them, he noticed a scarlet flower, “which is the most beautiful in this world.”

Without thinking twice, the merchant picked this flower, and at that same second “lightning flashed and thunder struck,” and “a monster, scary and shaggy” appeared. The owner of the garden was outraged that the guest was so ungrateful. That flower was a joy for the monster, and the merchant deprived him of the only joy in life.

The frightened merchant began to ask for forgiveness - it was not of his own free will that he picked the flower, but for the sake of his beloved youngest daughter. The monster became thoughtful and decided to have mercy on the merchant, but only in exchange for a promise to send to him “one of his good, handsome daughters.” He promised not to offend his guest, and to arrange for her the most luxurious, most free life.

The merchant cried bitterly when he heard these words, but there was nothing to do. The monster gave him three days and three nights to be with his daughters. Afterwards, one of them had to be here of her own free will.

The merchant received a magic ring from the monster - “whoever puts it on his right little finger will find himself wherever he wants in the blink of an eye.” He put it on his finger, and at the same moment he found himself at home, and his caravans with expensive goods appeared at the gate. The merchant told his daughters about his misfortune, but the elders refused to sacrifice themselves for the sake of the priest. And only the youngest, the most beloved, agreed to go to the monster to save her father from a cruel death. She put the magic ring on her finger, and immediately found herself in the palace.

The girl began to walk around the palace and the wonderful garden, admiring its overseas wonders. Suddenly, “words of fire” began to appear on the walls of the palace - this is how the monster began to communicate with her dear guest, so as not to inadvertently frighten her with her appearance.

The girl lived well in the palace - she tasted the most delicious, most exquisite treats, tried on the most expensive clothes, enjoyed wonderful music, and communicated with the hospitable host. After a while, completely trusting, the merchant’s daughter asked the monster to appear before her. At first she was afraid of his creepy appearance, but quickly overcame her fear and became friends with him.

One day the girl dreamed “that her father was lying unwell.” The monster allowed her to visit her father, but with one condition - to return in three days, otherwise it would die of terrible melancholy.

Seeing his beloved daughter alive and healthy, the merchant instantly cheered up. Having heard how she was living in the monster’s palace, her older sisters were jealous of her and did not want to let her go at the appointed hour. In secret from everyone, they moved the hands of the clock back.

A bad feeling began to torment the beautiful girl. Having barely waited for the allotted time, she put a magic ring on her finger and found herself in the palace. But everything changed in it - the fountains did not gurgle, the birds did not sing, and the music could not be heard. With difficulty, the merchant's daughter found the monster, which lay lifeless in the garden near the scarlet flower. She ran up to him and, crying, said: “You get up, wake up, my dear friend, I love you like a desired groom!” At that moment lightning struck and the girl lost consciousness.

She woke up in the palace, next to her father and sisters. Nearby stood “the young prince, a handsome man.” He said that an evil witch had placed a terrible curse on him, and only true love could destroy it. The merchant's daughter fell in love with him not for his beauty and wealth, but for his “kind soul,” and thereby destroyed the witchcraft spell.

The merchant joyfully blessed the newlyweds, and “without hesitation they began to have a merry feast and a wedding, and began to live and get along, and make good things.”

Conclusion

With his work, Sergei Aksakov wanted to show that there are no barriers to true love, and even the most terrible spell is powerless against an ardent loving heart.

After familiarizing yourself with a brief retelling“The Scarlet Flower” we recommend reading the fairy tale in its full version.

Fairy tale test

Test your memorization summary test:

Retelling rating

average rating: 4.6. Total ratings received: 177.

Title of the work: The Scarlet Flower

Year of writing: 1858

Genre: fairy tale

Main characters: Nastenka- the youngest and beloved daughter of a merchant, her father, monster.

Plot

The merchant, leaving for distant countries, asked his daughters what they wanted to receive from him as a gift. Nastenka asked to bring a scarlet flower. Returning home, the merchant was caught in a terrible storm. desert island, where I discovered a wonderful flower. The merchant tore it off, but at that moment the Monster appeared and demanded a terrible payment: either the merchant himself must return to the island and die there, or his daughter must come and atone for her father’s guilt. Nastenka, having accidentally learned about her father’s agreement with the Beast, immediately went to the island. Here she made friends with the Owner, but was very homesick. After some time, the owner of the island let the girl go home to stay, but asked her to return exactly on time. Nastenka’s envious sisters, having learned how well she was living on the island, moved the hands of the clock, and when Nastenka returned a little late, she saw the Monster lying on the ground without signs of life. The girl tried to revive him and confessed her love for him. At that moment, the Beast turned into a young man, the evil spell cast on him dissipated, and the young people lived in happiness and contentment.

Conclusion (my opinion)

Aksakov's fairy tale, written down from the words of the serf peasant woman Pelageya, like everyone else folk tales, teaches that only by going through trials and difficulties can one achieve true happiness.