Emotional incest. King Thrushbeard's Revenge

The fairy tale tells how, at a groom's viewing, a proud, beautiful princess rejected one of them after another, while mocking their imaginary and real shortcomings. It was especially bad for the young prince, who occupied almost the most honorable place among the suitors. Any girl would have liked him, but the princess thought that his beard was much sharper than it should be and protruded too much forward, reminiscent of the beak of a thrush, so she nicknamed him “King Thrushbeard.” As a result, all the noble suitors left with nothing, and the enraged old king vowed to marry the girl to the first beggar who came to the palace. After some time, a traveling musician dressed in dirty rags came to the castle, and the king, keeping his word, gave him his daughter. The beggar dragged the princess through meadows, forests and mountains. When she asked her husband who owned all these lands, he invariably answered that they were all the property of King Thrushbeard. So, after a few days, they arrived in a large city, which also turned out to be the possession of King Thrushbeard. The princess tried to get used to the hard life of the common people, living in a small hut owned by her beggar husband; she tried to spin and knit baskets from willow vines - but her hands, not accustomed to hard work, could not cope with the work. Then her husband sent her to sell pots at the market. The first day was successful, and the girl earned some money, but the next day a drunken hussar ran into her goods on horseback and broke all the pots. In the end, the husband, through friends, got his wife a dishwasher in the royal castle. A few days later, during a feast at which the princess served for food, she suddenly saw King Thrushbeard entering the hall and dressed in precious clothes. He approached the girl and led her to dance, but then the scraps that the princess had collected at the tables and which she was going to take home suddenly fell from the hem of her dress and pockets. The courtiers immediately burst into loud laughter, and the girl, beside herself with shame, rushed away from the castle. Suddenly the king himself caught up with her and revealed himself to her: he was the poor musician to whom her father married her. It was he who broke her pots in the square and forced her to knit baskets and spin in order to humble her pride and teach her a lesson for her arrogance, which prompted the princess to ridicule him. The tearful princess asked her husband for forgiveness for the previous insults and the royal couple, having reconciled, celebrated a luxurious wedding in the palace.

The main character of the Brothers Grimm fairy tale “King Thrushbeard” is the daughter of a king. This princess had a terrible character, she was very proud and arrogant. Her father wanted to marry her off, but the princess rejected all the suitors, finding shortcomings in each and ridiculing them.

She gave one of the suitors, the king, the caustic nickname “Thrushbeard” because his chin resembled a blackbird’s beak. The princess's father was tired of watching his daughter being bullied by eminent suitors, and he promised that he would give her in marriage to the first beggar who appeared in front of the palace.

The next day, a wandering singer appeared under the windows of the palace. The king called him to his place and married him to his daughter. After this, he announced to the princess that she must now live with her husband and escorted the newlyweds out of the palace.

The princess had to follow her poor husband. On the way, she asked him who owned these or those meadows, forests and cities? To this the husband replied that the owner was King Thrushbeard, whom the princess rejected.

The princess and her husband settled in his miserable shack and began to live like ordinary people. The princess did not know how to do anything, and her husband sent her to sell pots at the market. At first, trade went well, because people willingly bought goods from the beautiful potter.

But one day some horseman broke all the pots, and her husband scolded her. After that, he got her a job in the kitchen at the palace of King Thrushbeard. The princess worked as a scullery maid and brought home leftover food from the royal table. This is what the family ate.

One day a holiday was announced in the palace - the wedding of the eldest prince. The princess decided to look at the holiday. When the elegant royal groom passed by her, he suddenly grabbed the princess and dragged her to dance. She suddenly recognized Thrushbeard in the prince. During the dance, the pots with leftover food that the princess kept with her fell and broke. The guests began to laugh. The princess felt ashamed.

And then Thrushbeard told her that it was he who pretended to be a wandering singer and took her in marriage, and that it was he who broke her pots. All this was done to pacify the princess’s pride. The princess began to cry and admitted that she had behaved unworthily. But King Thrushbeard told her that all the problems were in the past, and now they would celebrate the wedding. The princess was dressed in an elegant dress, and among the guests was her father. And the fun holiday began.

This is the summary of the tale.

The main idea of ​​the Brothers Grimm fairy tale “King Thrushbeard” is that you should not be arrogant and arrogant towards other people if you are in a privileged position. You can never tell how life circumstances will turn out in the future. The princess never dreamed that she might end up the wife of a beggar. But this happened to her, and then she realized that she had behaved incorrectly with worthy people.

The fairy tale “King Thrushbeard” teaches not to be arrogant, to be polite and friendly towards other people.

In the fairy tale of the Brothers Grimm, I liked King Thrushbeard. He was not offended by the princess for the nickname given to him, but decided to teach her a lesson in morality. Thrushbeard's plan turned out to be successful and the princess, having undergone many trials, began to look at life differently.

What proverbs fit the fairy tale “King Thrushbeard”?

The arrogant man builds himself high and lies low.
Where the husband is, there is the wife.
All is well that ends well.

Literature lesson notes

Class 3 "D", "E"

Theme: brothers Grimm"King Thrushbeard."

Date of:______________

Goal: to introduce students to fairy tale by the Brothers Grimm "King Thrushbeard."

Tasks:

1. Develop in students expressiveness when reading aloud, awareness when reading silently, teach them to highlight the main thing, analyze the text, draw conclusions, and continue to work on developing reading speed.

2. Broaden the horizons of students, develop thinking and speech.

3. Cultivate a positive attitude among students towards the subject.

Lesson type: learning new material

Teaching aids: textbook,

During the classes

Organization of the beginning of the lesson

Checking homework

Updating students' knowledge

What is a fairy tale?

What types are they divided into? fairy tales?

What does the composition of a fairy tale consist of?

Message of the topic, lesson objectives

Learning new material

Meeting the writers.

We will get acquainted with the Brothers Grimm fairy tale “King Thrushbeard” and try to understand why both children and adults have loved and read their fairy tales for 200 years.

Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm, or the Grimm brothers, were German scientists who wrote many scientific works. But they became more famous as writers, authors of wonderful fairy tales: “The Town Musicians of Bremen”, “The Brave Little Tailor”, “Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs”, and many others.

Vocabulary work:

Getting caught in the nuts means getting punished.

A penny is a small copper coin.

Hussar is a lightly armed cavalry soldier.

Primary reading of a fairy tale by the teacher

Reading a fairy tale in a chain

Perception check:

Did you like the fairy tale?

Name the main characters?

What exactly did you like? What moment of the fairy tale caught your attention?

Secondary reading

A) Reading the first part of the fairy tale.

Describe the king's daughter at the beginning of the fairy tale? How did the princess behave?

What did the king do to find her a groom?

What words did she call the invited suitors?

Why did she name the young king “King Thrushbeard”?

How did the old king react to his daughter's ridicule? What did he decide?

B) Reading the second part of the fairy tale.

How many days passed after the king gathered the suitors to the palace?

Who knocked on the palace gates? Describe a beggar.

What did the beggar ask the king?

How did the king reward the beggar?

How did the king's daughter react?

B) Reading the third part of the fairy tale.

Where did the princess go after her wedding to the beggar?

What did she see when they sat down to rest under the old oak tree?

What did the princess see by the river?

What did she ask the beggar when they approached the gates of the big city?

How did the capricious princess react to the fact that everything she saw belonged to King Thrushbeard?

What did she want?

What did the beggar say to her in response?

D) Reading the fourth part of the fairy tale.

What house did the king's daughter see?

What kind of dinner did the princess prepare?

What occupation did the beggar find for her?

Was the princess able to complete all the tasks that her husband gave her? Why?

What job did the princess agree to?

Tell us how she sold pots.

What happened in the market square?

What did her husband say to her?

What new job was waiting for her?

What event was supposed to happen in the castle?

Describe the king. What was he wearing?

What did King Thrushbeard do when he saw the young woman outside the door?

What happened when they danced?

How did the guests react to this?

How did the princess feel? What did she do?

Who was King Thrushbeard?

What lesson did King Thrushbeard teach the princess?

How did this fairy tale end?

*Drawing oral illustration.

    Consolidation of knowledge and methods of action.

    Why is “King Thrushbeard” a literary fairy tale?

    What fairy tales of the Brothers Grimm have you read?

    Do you know fairy tales by other authors that are similar to the fairy tale “King Thrushbeard”?

    Reflection:

    I learned a lot about literary fairy tales and authors.

Tell me, what does this fairy tale teach us? What lesson can we learn?

Homework: read the exponent, draw a picture for this fairy tale.

The difference between a literary and folk tale is as follows:

    Literary fairy tale -copyright work in contrast to the folk tale, which arose as a small epic genre as a resultcollective creativity of the ethnic group.

    Literary fairy tale - genrefiction , while a folk tale is one offolklore genres , the peculiarity of which is oral retelling.

    A literary fairy tale can have a free plot invented by the author. In a folk tale, the plot line is strictly subordinated to a certain pattern, which the narrator must adhere to in order to maintain the outline of the story.

    Image system in a literary fairy talearbitrary , in folk – determined by traditions and ideasabout good and evil forces.

    A folk tale in artistic form reflects a deep layer of collective consciousness and belongs to the oldest type of oral folk art. A literary fairy tale can continue national traditions, but is a figment of the author’s imagination and, in genre terms, is close to modern types of adventure and fantasy literature.

    as a subset of the results , connected by the unity of the theme;

Year of writing: 1855

Genre: fairy tale

Main characters: spoiled king's daughter, King Thrush

Plot

The daughter of one king was so arrogant and capricious that she refused all the suitors. This angered the king, and he promised to marry her to the first person he met.

At night, a beggar musician knocked on the castle and the king gave his daughter to him as his wife. The princess had to accept the dirtiest and hardest work, heating the stove, washing dirty pots, weaving willow baskets and not having enough food.

Since the spoiled princess could not do anything well, her husband gave her a job as a scullery maid at the royal castle, where she collected scraps into a small pot for dinner in the evening.

Soon a royal ball was announced, many guests came to the castle, and the unfortunate beggar’s wife could only shed tears for the past. And then King Drozdovik himself, she was the one who once gave him such a funny nickname, invited the princess to dance. As he led her across the hall, a clay pot of scraps fell out of the apron and all the pieces scattered across the hall. The princess ran away in shame, but the king caught up with her and admitted that it was he who pretended to be a beggar and took her as his wife.

Conclusion (my opinion)

Only after becoming a beggar did the princess realize how disgustingly she had behaved and insulted good people.