The Tsar Saltan. 333 West 4 th Avenue P: (907)

Similar documents
DOWNLOAD PDF THE TALE OF TSAR SALTAN

Grade 2 Book of Stories

BBC LEARNING ENGLISH Gulliver's Travels 4: Voyage to Brobdingnag

Flight of the Robins!

THE PRINCESS AND THE FROG. G1C Annual show

The Ten Minute Tutor Read-a-long Book Video Chapter 20 TREASURE ISLAND. Author - Robert Louis Stevenson

The Gecko. Tips for Telling

Grade 2 - English Ongoing Assessment T-2( ) Lesson 4 Diary of a Spider. Vocabulary

The Swallow takes the big red ruby from the Prince s sword and flies away with it in his beak over the roofs of the town. Glossary

How the Beggar Boy Turned into Count Piro

Explorers 4 Teacher s notes for the Comprehension Test: The Adventures of Odysseus

Introducing the Read-Aloud

Lesson Objectives. Core Content Objectives. Language Arts Objectives

Peeps into the Past

Amanda Cater - poems -

I NG MIDAS. and the GOLDEN TOUCH. as told by Charlotte Craft illustrated t by K.Y. Craft

Island of the Blue Dolphin Questions

In classic literature, Odysseus is also known by what name? Define the word odyssey. The Iliad and Odyssey were composed sometime between what years?

Marriner thought for a minute. 'Very well, Mr Hewson, let's say this. If your story comes out in The Morning Times, there's five pounds waiting for

Princess Florabunda and the Dancing Sleepover Sherralyn St. Clair

Butterscotch decided to knock on the jelly door, instead of eating it. When he began to knock, the entire house began to shake!

The Mermaid and the Centaur Part II by Ana Ruiz

The Real Prize. Malcolm is rowing old Joe's rowboat into the Sound. Malcolm. never lets me go with him in the boat; I have to watch from the

Chapter 1 Huck, Tom and Jim

Description. Direct Instruction. Teacher Tips. Preparation/Materials. GRADE 4 Comprehension Compare/Contrast Stories (Supplemental)

HIDALGO HOUSE OF GIGGLES

Explorers 4 Teacher s notes for the Comprehension Test: Robin Hood and his Merry Men

In this activity, students read and put summary sentences in order to summarise the story. They can work on their own, in pairs or in groups.

A Midsummer Nights Dream

Story & Drawings By Ellen Lebsock

The Snow Queen. The Snow Queen

THE BLACK CAP (1917) By Katherine Mansfield

Word Fry Phrase. one by one. I had this. how is he for you

Homework for half-chicken March 14 March 18, 2016 (Return this sheet, Monday, March 21 st ) Name:

HAMLET. Visual Story. To help prepare you for your visit to Shakespeare s Globe. Relaxed Performance Sunday 12 August, 1.00pm

Kentucky. Released Items. Commonwealth Accountability Testing System. Kentucky Core Content Test Spring Grade.

Chapter 1 Kirren Island. Blood Ties - Introduction

LOCAL: 3 RD CYCLE OF PRIMARY LEVEL 5 (PAGE 1)

Crying. Unit 4 Read and enjoy

The Poetry of Phrases Foundation Lesson

Translated by Brother Anthony of Taizé

The Moon Bowl. The Moon Bowl LEVELED READER BOOK SA. Visit for thousands of books and materials.

Three Wishes. Introduction This popular story starter can begin with an old story.

Pages of Stars Entry for 2016 Andy Kreyche. Turtle in the Sky. By Andy Kreyche

Poems in Wonderland. Mary Katherine Klaybor South Bend, Indiana

Answers for Fun Activities

Lesson Plan to Accompany My Lost Youth

Bluegrass Music: Chopping and Singing Songs of Sorrow A Smithsonian Folkways Lesson Designed by: Claire M. Anderson University of Washington

Objectives: 1. To appreciate the literary techniques used in two poems by Celia Thaxter.

ACT 1. Montague and his wife have not seen their son Romeo for quite some time and decide to ask Benvolio where he could be.

African Tales: Kalulu and Rumpelstiltskin. by Timothy Mason

Henry s Highlights. The Children s Hour By Henry W. Longfellow

Text copyright Michael Morpurgo, Illustrations copyright Emma Chichester Clark, Courtesy of HarperCollins Children's Books.

Learning to Fly. You bin playing my DS? You broke mine! Stanley lived with his dad and older brother Kyle.

Poems by Alfred Lord Tennyson

March 12 th, 13 th and 14th 2015

BBC LEARNING ENGLISH Gulliver's Travels 5: Palace of the giants

Aloni Gabriel and Butterfly

used to think, on account of my somewhat strange start in life, I suppose, that I was unlike everyone else. In one way I am. After all, I am now 130

My Christmas Adventure

TREASURE ISLAND. Adapted by Bill Robertson from the novel by Robert Louis Stevenson. COPYRIGHT 1996 Bill Robertson/ Bitesize Theatre Company

Check out the above poem for examples of literary allusions from Shakespeare!

Music: The Beauty of Loneliness, Pain, and Disappointment in Kate Chopin s The Awakening

In which Romeo loves Juliet.

Sleeping Beauty By Camille Atebe

TEST NAME: ELA 11/18 TEST ID: GRADE:05 - Fifth Grade SUBJECT:English Language and Literature TEST CATEGORY: School Assessment

DELHI PUBLIC SCHOOL FIROZABAD

Can Rock and Roll Save America?

THE YELLOW BUTTERFLY. Off flew the butterfly!

They can sing, they can dance After all, miss, this is France And a dinner here is never second best Go on, unfold your menu Take a glance and then

eéåxé tçw ]âä xà by William Shakespeare

Riddles in the Dark. By J. R. R. Tolkien

Explorers 6 Teacher s notes for the Comprehension Test: Treasure Island

Orientation and Conferencing Plan Stage 6

Shakespeare paper: Romeo and Juliet

Stories of Great Ballets with Late Elementary to Early Intermediate Piano Arrangements

Contents. Fiction. The Two Weavers

The World; The Arena of Civilization

Alice in Wonderland. Great Illustrated Classics Reading Comprehension Worksheets. Sample file

BANG! BANG! BANG! The noise scared me at first, until I turned around and saw this kid in a dark-blue hockey jersey and a black tuque staring at me

Comprehension Lab! Comprehension Lab! Comprehension Lab! Comprehension Lab! Comprehension Lab! Comprehension Lab! e.g. I have a headache. e.g.

Once Upon A Time LEARN ABOUT OUR SHOW! Fairy Tale Checklist: Study Guide Always Free Bright Star Touring Theatre. events.

Grade 3. Practice Test. Robin Hood Wins the Golden Arrow Robin Hood and the King

Poetry. Anisha Patel

Complete the sentence using words in the box. disappeared, wasted, miserable, appeared, appeared. to begin to be seen

The Evil King - Unit 7 Worksheets - Reader 5

the earth is a living thing Sleeping in the Forest What is our place in nature?

Chapter I. Bruce and Alice arrive in Ruritania.

Dylan Medley. INTRO Slowly G(2) C(2) D(4) G(2) C(2) D(4) CHORDS

AUDITION INFORMATION FOR

You flew out? Are you trying to make a fool of me?! said Miller surprised and rising his eyebrows. I swear to God, it wasn t my intention.

Sweeter than sweet. Moniek Peek Bente Jonker. De Vier Windstreken

Hamlet: Act II. But in the beaten way of friendship, / what make you at Elsinore? / To visit you, my lord, no other

BBC LEARNING ENGLISH Jamaica Inn 5: Lost on the moor

Past Simple Questions

The Odyssey Part One Test

SALTY DOG Year 2

Directions: Read the following passage then answer the questions below. The Lost Dog (740L)

TENNESSEE. State Performance Indicators. Practice and Mastery. Reading and Language Arts. Tennessee TCAP TCAP TCAP TCAP TCAP TCAP TCAP TCAP TCAP TCAP

MOBY-DICK MOBY-DICK HERMAN MELVILLE S. Call me Ishmael. Some years ago I thought I would sail about a little and see the watery part of the world.

Transcription:

The Tsar Saltan Long ago in a faraway kingdom, three sisters were outside in the courtyard talking, imagining what they would do if they were married to Tsar Saltan. One said that she would prepare a great feast for the entire world. The next said that she would weave linen for the entire world. The third said that she would give the tsar "an heir, handsome and brave beyond compare." It so happened that the tsar, who was just outside the fence, overheard the conversation. When he heard the words of the last maiden, he fell in love and asked her to be his wife. They were married that very same night and conceived a son soon after. The other sisters were given jobs as a cook and a weaver. A few months later the tsar went to war and had to part with his beloved wife. While he was at war his wife, the queen, gave birth to his son. A rider was sent to the tsar to convey the good news. However, the two sisters and a friend named Barbarika were so jealous of their sister's luck that they kidnapped the rider and replaced him with their own messenger who carried a note to the tsar which read: "your wife, the queen, has borne neither a son nor daughter, neither a mouse nor a frog, but had given birth to an unknown little creature." When he read this message, the tsar was mortified and sent a letter back telling his wife to wait for his return before taking any action. The scheming sisters met the rider on the way back, got him drunk, and replaced the tsar's actual letter with a fake one that ordered the queen and her baby to be put into a barrel and thrown into the sea. Of course, there was no way to disobey an order from the tsar, so the palace guards put the queen and her son into the barrel and rolled it into the water. As the queen wept inside the barrel, her son grew stronger, not by the day, but by the minute. He begged the waves to wash them onto dry land. The waves obeyed and he and his mother found themselves washed ashore on a deserted island.

By now they were quite hungry, so the son made himself a bow and arrow, using small branches from a tree, and went hunting. Near the sea, he heard a screech and saw a poor swan struggling against a huge black hawk. Just as the hawk was about to bury its beak in the swan's neck, the youth shot an arrow, killing the hawk and spilling the bird's blood into the sea. The white swan swam up to the lad, thanked him and said, "you didn't kill a hawk at all, but a wicked wizard. For saving my life, I will serve you forever." The son returned to his mother and told her of his adventure, and then they both fell soundly asleep, even though they were still hungry and thirsty. The next morning they awoke and saw a wondrous city standing before them where there had been nothing before! The two marveled at the golden domes of the monasteries and churches behind the city's white walls. "My, look at all the swan has done!" the lad thought. The two walked into the city and throngs of people greeted them and crowned the young man a prince, proclaiming him Prince Gvidon. One day a merchant ship was sailing near the island when its sailors caught a glimpse of the amazing walled city. The city's cannons signaled the ship to come ashore. Prince Gvidon welcomed them and offered them food and drink. He asked what they had for sale and where they were going. "Our trade is in furs", they said, "and we are headed past the island of Buyan to the kingdom of Tsar Saltan." Gvidon asked the merchant sailors to convey his respects to the tsar, even though his mother had earlier told him about the note that led to their expulsion from the tsar's kingdom. Still, Prince Gvidon thought the best of people and could never quite believe that his father could do such a thing. As the merchant sailors were preparing to leave the island, the prince became sad when thinking about his father. "What is wrong? Why are you so gloomy," the swan said. "I so wish to see my father, the tsar", Gvidon replied. Then, with a splash of water, the swan turned the prince into a small gnat so that he could hide himself in a crack of the mast of the ship en route to see the tsar. When the ship arrived at the Tsar Saltan's kingdom, the tsar greeted the merchant sailors and asked them to tell of the lands they had seen. The sailors told the tsar about the island and the walled city, and spoke of the hospitable Prince Gvidon. The tsar did not know that this Prince Gvidon was his son, but expressed a wish to see this beautiful city anyway. The two sisters and the old Barbarika did not want to let him go, however, and acted as if there were nothing to marvel at in the sailors' tale. "What is really amazing," they said, "is a squirrel that sits under a fir tree, cracking golden nuts containing kernels of pure emerald, and singing a song. That's something which is truly extraordinary!"

Hearing this, the gnat, really Prince Gvidon, got angry and stung the old woman's right eye. After he flew back to the island, Gvidon told the swan the story he heard about the remarkable squirrel. Then the prince walked into his courtyard and, lo and behold, there was the singing squirrel, sitting under a fir tree, cracking golden nuts! The prince rejoiced at this and ordered that a crystal house be built for the little animal. He placed a guard there to stand watch and ordered a scribe to record every shell. Profit for the prince, honor for the squirrel! Some time later, a second ship came to the island enroute to the tsar and the prince again told the swan that he wished to see his father again. This time, the swan turned the prince into a fly so that he could hide in a crack of the ship. After the vessel arrived in the kingdom, the sailors told Tsar Saltan about the wondrous squirrel they had seen. Saltan again wanted to visit this fabled city but was talked out of it when the two sisters and Barbarika ridiculed the sailors' story and spoke themselves of a greater wonder--of thirty-three handsome young knights, led by old Chernomor, rising from out of the raging sea. The fly, Gvidon, became quite angry with the women and stung Barbarika's left eye before flying back to the island. Once home again, he told the swan about old Chernomor and the thirty-three knights, and lamented that he had never seen such a wonder. "These knights are from the great waters that I know," the swan said. "Don't be sad, for these knights are my brothers and they will come to you." Later, the prince went back and climbed a tower of his palace and gazed at the sea. Suddenly, a giant wave rose high and deep onto the shore, and when it receded, thirty-three knights in armor, led by old Chernomor, emerged, ready to serve Prince Gvidon. They promised that they would come out of the sea each day to protect the city. A few months later, a third ship came to the island. In his customary fashion, the prince again made the sailors feel welcome and told them to send his respects to the tsar. As the sailors prepared themselves for their journey, the prince told the swan that he still couldn't get his father out of his mind and wished to see him again. This time the swan turned the prince into a bumblebee. The ship arrived in the kingdom and the sailors told Tsar Saltan about the wondrous city they had seen and how every day thirty-three knights and old Chernomor would emerge from the sea to protect the island. The tsar marveled at this and wanted to see this extraordinary land, but once again was talked out of it by the two sisters and old Barbarika. They belittled the

sailors' tale and said that what was really amazing was that beyond the seas lived a princess so stunning that you couldn't take your eyes off of her. "The light of day pales against her beauty, the darkness of night is lit up by it. When she speaks it is like the murmur of a tranquil brook. Now that's a marvel!" they said. Gvidon, the bumblebee, got angry at the women once more and stung Barbarika on her nose. They tried to catch him, but to no avail. He was safely on his journey back home. After his arrival there, Gvidon strolled out to the seashore until he was met by the white swan. "Why so gloomy this time?" the swan asked. Gvidon said that he was sad because he did not have a wife. He related the tale he had heard of the beautiful princess whose beauty lit up the darkness, whose words flowed like a murmuring brook. The swan was silent for awhile, then said that there was such a princess. "But a wife," the swan continued, "is no glove that one can simply cast from one's hand." Gvidon said he understood but that he was prepared to walk the rest of his life and to all corners of the world to search for the wondrous princess. At this, the swan sighed and said: There's no need to travel, There's no need to tire. The woman that you desire, Is now yours to spy. The princess is I. With this, she flapped her wings and turned into the beautiful woman that the prince had heard about. The two passionately embraced and kissed, and Gvidon took her to meet his mother. The prince and the beautiful maiden were married that very same evening. A short time later, another ship came to the island. As usual, Prince Gvidon welcomed the sailors and, as they were leaving, he asked the sailors to send his greetings to the tsar and to extend an invitation to him to visit. Being happy with his new bride, Gvidon decided not to leave the island this time. When the ship arrived at the kingdom of Tsar Sultan, the sailors again told the tsar of the fantastic island they had seen, of the singing squirrel cracking the golden nuts, of the thirty-three armored knights rising out of the sea, and of the lovely princess whose beauty was beyond compare. This time the tsar would not listen to the snide remarks of the sisters and Barbarika. He called his fleet and set sail for the island immediately. When he reached the island, Prince Gvidon was there to meet the tsar. Saying nothing, Gvidon led him, along with his two sisters-in-law and Barbarika, to the

palace. Along the way, the tsar saw everything that he had heard so much about. There at the gates were the thirty-three knights and old Chernomor standing guard. There in the courtyard was the remarkable squirrel, singing a song and gnawing on a golden nut. There in the garden was the beautiful princess, Gvidon's wife. And then the tsar saw something unexpected: there standing next to the princess was Gvidon's mother, the tsar's long-lost wife. The tsar recognized her immediately. With tears streaming down his cheeks, he rushed to embrace her, and years of heartache were now forgotten. He then realized that Prince Gvidon was his son, and the two threw their arms around each other as well. A merry feast was held. The two sisters and Barbarika hid in shame, but eventually they were found. They burst into tears, confessing everything. But the tsar was so happy that he let them all go. The tsar and the queen and Prince Gvidon and the princess lived the rest of their days in happiness. -- Written by the Russian poet Alexander Pushkin