Brief summary of why a camel has a hump. Review of Kipling's fairy tale “Why the Camel Has a Hump”
Kipling Rudyard, fairy tale "Where the camel got its hump"
The main characters of the fairy tale “Where the camel got its hump” and their characteristics
- Camel. Lazy, indifferent, carefree.
- Horse, dog, ox. Workers who did not want to do the work for others
- Human. Employer.
- Genie. Fair wizard.
- Camel in the Howling Desert.
- Horse
- Dog
- Man's decision
- Genie
- The Genie's Solution
- There lived a camel in the Howling Desert that did nothing
- A horse, a dog and an ox came to him and asked him to start working, but the camel did not
- The man decided to double the load on his animals
- The animals complained to the genie
- The genie decided to teach the camel a lesson and gave him a hump
- The camel went to work.
You can't sit back when everyone is working.
What does the fairy tale “Where the camel got its hump” teach?
The fairy tale teaches that laziness can lead to disaster. Teaches you to help your comrades and not to dump your work on others. Teaches that justice is a great good.
Review of the fairy tale “Where the camel got its hump”
A very interesting tale about a lazy camel who received a well-deserved punishment and lost his beautiful straight back. I liked the genie's decision, which restored justice. I don't like the camel and the man in the fairy tale. The camel is lazy, the man is because he makes the wrong decisions.
Proverbs for the fairy tale "Where does a camel get its hump"
Labor feeds, but laziness spoils.
Laziness does no good.
All for one, one for all
Summary, brief retelling of the fairy tale “Where the camel got its hump”
Once upon a time, in the Howling Desert, there lived a howler beast called a camel. When all the animals began to work on Monday, the camel only roared and chewed thorns.
A horse in a saddle came to him and offered to help her. But the camel just said Grrrb.
Then the dog and the ox came and also asked for help, and the camel answered everyone Grrrb.
The man found out about the lazy man, gave up, and began to put more burden on the horse, dog and ox.
The animals didn't like it. They gathered in the desert. They complained to the genie.
The genie wondered how to teach the camel to be smart.
The genie flew to the camel and began to invent a spell. Suddenly the camel grew a hump on its even back. The camel was upset, and the genie said that now the camel will work for the first three days without a break, because the hump will feed him.
And the camel had to work and go.
Since then, the camel has had a hump on its back.
Drawings and illustrations for the fairy tale "Where the camel got its hump"
Rudyard Joseph Kipling
Why does a camel have a hump?
Here is another fairy tale, and in it I want to tell you where such a large hump on the Camel’s back came from.
In the very first years, long, long ago, all the land was brand new, just made. From the very first days, animals began to serve Man. But in the Terribly Dull Desert lived a Terrible Dull Camel, who did not even think about working. He ate dry thorns, hard branches, tamarisk, blackthorn and bark, but he never wanted to work - such a shameless slacker and lazy! And no matter what they said to him, he answered everything:
Only “Grrb” - and nothing more.
Then one Monday morning the Horse came to him. The Horse had a saddle on his back and a bridle in his teeth.
Camel, oh Camel! - he said. - Go to the Man and start trotting like us.
Grrrb! - answered the Camel, and the Horse went to the Man and told him everything.
Soon after this, the Dog came to the Camel. He had a stick in his teeth. He came and said:
Camel, oh Camel! Go to Man, learn to go hunting with him, like we do.
Grrrb! - answered the Camel, and the Dog went to the Man and told him everything.
Soon after this, the Bull came to the Camel. The Bull had a yoke around his neck. He said:
Camel, oh Camel! Go to Man and plow the land like we do.
Grrrb! - answered the Camel, and the Bull went to the Man and told him everything.
In the evening the Man called the Horse, the Dog and the Bull and said:
Horse, Dog and Bull, I feel very sorry for you (after all, the world was still completely new!), but the beast that shouts “Grrb” in that Desert is not capable of any work, otherwise it would have come to me long ago. Let him live in his Desert, I won’t touch him, but you will have to work doubly - both for yourself and for him.
Then the Horse, the Dog and the Bull became very angry (after all, the world was still very new!). They went to the very edge of the Desert and began to loudly discuss what they should do, and barked, and neighed, and mooed. Camel approached them - a shameless slacker and a lazy person! - and, lazily chewing dry grass, began to mock them. Then he said “Grrb” and walked away.
The Genie, Lord of All Deserts, rushed past along the road in a cloud of dust. (Djinns always travel this way because they are sorcerers.) He stopped to chat with the Horse, the Dog and the Bull.
Lord of All Deserts! - said the Horse. - Who has the right to sit back if the world is so new and there is still so much work in it?
“Nobody,” answered the Genie.
But, - said the Horse, - in your Terrible-Sad Desert lives a Terrible-Sad Beast, with a long neck, with long legs, who since the very morning, since Monday, has not thought of getting to work. Doesn't want to trot - no way!
Phew! - Genie whistled. - Yes, this is my Camel, I swear by the gold of the Arabian land! What is he saying?
He says one word: “Grrb,” said the Dog. - “Grrb” - and nothing more. And he doesn’t want to help Man hunt.
What else does he say? - asked the Genie.
“Nothing else, just “Grrb,” and doesn’t want to plow,” answered the Bull.
Great! - exclaimed the Genie. - Please wait a minute, I’ll show him “Grrb” now.
He wrapped himself in his cloak of dust and rushed into the Desert. There he found the Camel. He stood and admired his reflection in the puddle - a shameless lazy person and a slacker.
“My crafty long-legged friend,” said the Genie, “I heard that you do not want to work in our new, brand new world. What does it mean?
Grrrb! - Camel answered.
The genie sat down on the sand and, resting his chin on his hand, began to cast a spell, while the Camel stood and, as if nothing had happened, admired his reflection in the puddle.
The Horse, the Bull and the Dog have been working since the very morning, since Monday, and they worked more than necessary, because you are such a shameless lazy person and a slacker,” said the Genie.
And he again rested his hand on his chin and continued to cast his spell.
Grrrb! - said Camel.
And how can you not get tired of this word? How many times do you repeat it? Shameless slacker and slacker, I want you to work.
Gr r r b! - repeated the Camel.
And suddenly his back, which he was so proud of, began to swell, and swell, and swell, and a huge, hard hump swelled up in him.
Admire it! - said the Genie. - This is the same “Grrb” that you constantly talk about. He grew up with you because you are a shameless lazy person and a slacker. Work started on Monday, today is Thursday, and you still haven’t started work. But now you will start working!
How will I work if I have a huge Grrb? - asked the Camel.
And this is your punishment! - answered the Genie. - Because you were absent for three days. But now you can work for three days without any food, because you will eat your own Grrb. You lived for three days with nothing but “Grrb.” After this, I hope you won't say that I don't care about you. Now leave the Desert, go to the Horse, the Dog and the Bull and make sure you behave well.
And the Camel with its hump went to the Horse, the Dog and the Bull. And to this day he carries his hump on his back (we don’t say “Grrb” anymore, we say “hump” so as not to offend the Camel), and to this day he cannot make up for the three days that he walked at the beginning, when the earth was new, and still he cannot learn how to behave.
camel,
The main character of Rudyard Kipling's fairy tale “Why the Camel Has a Hump” is the sad Camel. He lived at a time when the world was just created. All the animals had already begun to serve Man, but the Camel was lazy and did not want to work.
Various animals came to him and tried to persuade the lazy man to work for Man. But nothing could penetrate the Camel. He walked through the desert and chewed thorns. The Animals told the Man about the Camel, who does not want to work. To this the Man replied that if the Camel does not come to work for him, then he is not capable of anything, but other animals will still have to work for the camel.
The animals were angry that they would have to work for the Camel. They gathered on the edge of the desert and began to decide what could be done. The Genie approached them and they complained to him about the Camel.
The Genie got angry and went to look for the sad Camel. Having found him, the Genie also tried to reassure the lazy man, but did not achieve any results. Then the Genie made the camel grow a hump. He said that now the Camel will be forced to go without food and eat its hump until it learns to work. And to this day the camel wears its hump because it cannot make up for the time when it was idle in the desert.
This is the summary of the tale.
The main idea of Kipling's fairy tale “Why the Camel's Hump” is that slackers are not needed in a team, and if a person does not want to work, people find a way to punish him or force him to work.
Kipling's fairy tale "Why the Camel's Hump" teaches us to be hardworking and useful to society.
What proverbs are suitable for Kipling’s fairy tale “Why does a camel have a hump”?
Who does not work shall not eat.
To live without anything is only to smoke the sky.
Every day a lazy person is lazy.
Rudyard Kipling
How the camel got its hump
In this tale I will tell you how the camel got its hump.
At the beginning of centuries, when the world had just emerged and animals were just beginning to work for humans, there lived a camel. He lived in the Howling Desert because he did not want to work and was also a howler himself. He ate leaves, thorns, thorns, milkweed and was recklessly lazy. Whenever anyone spoke to him, he would snort, “frr...”, and nothing else.
On Monday morning a horse came to him with a saddle on its back and a bit in its mouth. She said:
- A camel, a camel! Come and drive with us.
“Frr...” answered the camel.
The horse left and told the man about it.
Then a dog appeared with a stick in its teeth and said:
- A camel, a camel! Come serve and carry with us.
“Frr...” answered the camel.
The dog left and told the man about it.
Then an ox appeared with a yoke around his neck and said:
- A camel, a camel! Come plow the land with us.
“Frr...” answered the camel. The ox left and told the man about it. At the end of the day, the man called his horse, dog and ox to him and said to them:
– You know, I’m very sorry for you. A camel in the desert does not want to work, well, he's a fool! But instead you have to work twice as hard.
This decision greatly angered the three hardworking animals, and they gathered for a meeting somewhere on the edge of the desert. There a camel approached them, chewing milkweed, and began to laugh at them. Then he said “frr...” and left.
Following this, the ruler of all deserts, the Djinn, appeared in a whole cloud of dust (Djinns, being wizards, always travel in this way). He stopped, listening to the meeting of the three.
“Tell us, Lord of the deserts, Genie,” asked the horse, “is it fair for anyone to be lazy and not want to work?”
“Of course not,” answered the Genie.
This picture shows the Genie beginning a spell that gave the camel a hump. First of all, he drew a line in the air with his finger, and it hardened. Then he made a cloud and finally an egg. You can see all this at the bottom of the picture. Using a small pump, the Genie produced a white flame, which turned into a charm. After that, he took his magic fan and began to fan the flames. It was a completely harmless witchcraft, and the camel received the hump rightly, as he was lazy. And the Jinn, the ruler of the deserts, was one of the kindest Jinns and never did harm to anyone.
“So,” the horse continued, “in the depths of your Howling Desert lives an animal with a long neck and long legs, a howler himself.” He hasn't done anything since Monday morning. He doesn't want to work at all.
“Phew!..” the Genie whistled. - Yes, this is my camel, I swear by all the gold of Arabia! What is he saying?
“He says “frr...” the dog answered, “and doesn’t want to serve or wear.”
– What else does he say?
“Only “frr...” and doesn’t want to plow,” answered the ox.
“Okay,” said the Genie, “I’ll teach him a lesson, wait here a minute.”
The genie wrapped himself in his cloud again and raced across the desert. He soon found the camel, which was doing nothing and looking at its own reflection in a puddle of water.
This is an image of the Genie, ruler of the deserts, as he casts a spell with his magic fan. The camel chews an acacia branch and, as usual, says “frr...”. No wonder the Genie told him that he snorts too much. The tall flame, as if emerging from an onion, represents an enchantment and carries a hump that is just the size of the flat back of a camel. The camel himself admires his reflection in the puddle so much that he does not notice the impending disaster.
Below the picture is a piece of primeval land: two smoking volcanoes, several mountains and boulders, a lake, a black island, a winding river, various other things, as well as Noah’s Ark. I could not draw all the deserts that the Genie ruled, and I only drew one, but the most desolate desert.
- Hey, buddy! - said the Genie. – I heard that you don’t want to work. Is it true?
“Frr...” answered the camel.
The genie sat down, resting his chin on his hand, and began to come up with a great spell, while the camel kept looking at his reflection in a puddle of water.
“Thanks to your laziness, three animals have been forced to work for you since Monday morning,” said the Genie and continued to think about the spell, resting his chin on his hand.
“Frr...” answered the camel.
“You shouldn’t snort,” said the Genie. -You snort too much. But I’ll tell you what: go to work.
The camel again answered “frr...”, but at that time he felt that his smooth back, which he was so proud of, suddenly began to swell, swell, and finally a huge hump formed on it.
“You see,” said the Genie, “this hump grew on you because you didn’t want to work.” Today is already Wednesday, and you haven’t done anything since Monday, when work started. Now it's your turn.
- How can I work with such a thing on my back? - said the camel.
“I arranged this on purpose,” said the Genie, “since you missed three whole days.” From now on you will be able to work for three days without any food, and the hump will feed you. You have no right to complain that I didn't take care of you. Give up your desert, go to three friends and behave properly. Yes, turn around quickly!
No matter how the camel snorted, he had to get to work along with the other animals. However, he still has not yet made up for the three days that he missed from the very beginning, and he still has not yet learned to behave properly.
Rudyard Kipling
How the camel got its hump
In this tale I will tell you how the camel got its hump.
At the beginning of centuries, when the world had just emerged and animals were just beginning to work for humans, there lived a camel. He lived in the Howling Desert because he did not want to work and was also a howler himself. He ate leaves, thorns, thorns, milkweed and was recklessly lazy. Whenever anyone spoke to him, he would snort, “frr...”, and nothing else.
On Monday morning a horse came to him with a saddle on its back and a bit in its mouth. She said:
- A camel, a camel! Come and drive with us.
“Frr...” answered the camel.
The horse left and told the man about it.
Then a dog appeared with a stick in its teeth and said:
- A camel, a camel! Come serve and carry with us.
“Frr...” answered the camel.
The dog left and told the man about it.
Then an ox appeared with a yoke around his neck and said:
- A camel, a camel! Come plow the land with us.
“Frr...” answered the camel. The ox left and told the man about it. At the end of the day, the man called his horse, dog and ox to him and said to them:
– You know, I’m very sorry for you. A camel in the desert does not want to work, well, he's a fool! But instead you have to work twice as hard.
This decision greatly angered the three hardworking animals, and they gathered for a meeting somewhere on the edge of the desert. There a camel approached them, chewing milkweed, and began to laugh at them. Then he said “frr...” and left.
Following this, the ruler of all deserts, the Djinn, appeared in a whole cloud of dust (Djinns, being wizards, always travel in this way). He stopped, listening to the meeting of the three.
“Tell us, Lord of the deserts, Genie,” asked the horse, “is it fair for anyone to be lazy and not want to work?”
“Of course not,” answered the Genie.
This picture shows the Genie beginning a spell that gave the camel a hump. First of all, he drew a line in the air with his finger, and it hardened. Then he made a cloud and finally an egg. You can see all this at the bottom of the picture. Using a small pump, the Genie produced a white flame, which turned into a charm. After that, he took his magic fan and began to fan the flames. It was a completely harmless witchcraft, and the camel received the hump rightly, as he was lazy. And the Jinn, the ruler of the deserts, was one of the kindest Jinns and never did harm to anyone.
“So,” the horse continued, “in the depths of your Howling Desert lives an animal with a long neck and long legs, a howler himself.” He hasn't done anything since Monday morning. He doesn't want to work at all.
“Phew!..” the Genie whistled. - Yes, this is my camel, I swear by all the gold of Arabia! What is he saying?
“He says “frr...” the dog answered, “and doesn’t want to serve or wear.”
– What else does he say?
“Only “frr...” and doesn’t want to plow,” answered the ox.
“Okay,” said the Genie, “I’ll teach him a lesson, wait here a minute.”
The genie wrapped himself in his cloud again and raced across the desert. He soon found the camel, which was doing nothing and looking at its own reflection in a puddle of water.
This is an image of the Genie, ruler of the deserts, as he casts a spell with his magic fan. The camel chews an acacia branch and, as usual, says “frr...”. No wonder the Genie told him that he snorts too much. The tall flame, as if emerging from an onion, represents an enchantment and carries a hump that is just the size of the flat back of a camel. The camel himself admires his reflection in the puddle so much that he does not notice the impending disaster.
Below the picture is a piece of primeval land: two smoking volcanoes, several mountains and boulders, a lake, a black island, a winding river, various other things, as well as Noah’s Ark. I could not draw all the deserts that the Genie ruled, and I only drew one, but the most desolate desert.
- Hey, buddy! - said the Genie. – I heard that you don’t want to work. Is it true?
“Frr...” answered the camel.
The genie sat down, resting his chin on his hand, and began to come up with a great spell, while the camel kept looking at his reflection in a puddle of water.
“Thanks to your laziness, three animals have been forced to work for you since Monday morning,” said the Genie and continued to think about the spell, resting his chin on his hand.