Boy at Christ's Christmas tree. Christmas "tale" ("The Boy at Christ's Christmas Tree" by F.M.

Boy at Christ's Christmas tree.  Rozhdestvenskaya

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Fedor Dostoevsky
BOY AT CHRIST'S TREE

I
BOY WITH A HANDLE

Children are strange people, they dream and imagine. Before the Christmas tree and just before Christmas, I kept meeting on the street, on a certain corner, one boy, no more than seven years old. In the terrible frost, he was dressed almost like summer clothes, but his neck was tied with some kind of old clothes, which means that someone equipped him when they sent him. He walked “with a pen”; This is a technical term and means to beg for alms. The term was invented by these boys themselves. There are many like him, they spin on your road and howl something they have learned by heart; but this one did not howl and spoke somehow innocently and unusually and looked trustingly into my eyes - therefore, he was just starting a profession. In response to my questions, he said that he had a sister who was unemployed and ill; maybe it’s true, but only I found out later that there are a lot of these boys: they are sent out “with a pen” even in the most terrible frost, and if they don’t get anything, then they will probably be beaten. Having collected kopecks, the boy returns with red, numb hands to some basement, where some gang of negligent workers are drinking, the same ones who, “having gone on strike at the factory on Sunday on Saturday, return to work no earlier than on Wednesday evening.” . There, in the basements, their hungry and beaten wives are drinking with them, and their hungry babies are squealing right there. Vodka, and dirt, and debauchery, and most importantly, vodka. With the collected pennies, the boy is immediately sent to the tavern, and he brings more wine. For fun, sometimes they pour a scythe into his mouth and laugh when, with his breathing stopped, he falls almost unconscious on the floor.


...and I put bad vodka in my mouth
Ruthlessly poured...

When he grows up, he is quickly sold off to a factory somewhere, but everything he earns, he is again obliged to bring to the careless workers, and they again drink away. But even before the factory, these children become complete criminals. They wander around the city and know places in different basements where they can crawl into and where they can spend the night unnoticed. One of them spent several nights in a row with one janitor in some kind of basket, and he never noticed him. Of course, they become thieves. Theft turns into a passion even among eight-year-old children, sometimes even without any consciousness of the criminality of the action. In the end they endure everything - hunger, cold, beatings - for only one thing, for freedom, and run away from their careless people to wander away from themselves. This wild creature sometimes does not understand anything, neither where he lives, nor what nation he is, whether there is a God, whether there is a sovereign; even such people convey things about them that are incredible to hear, and yet they are all facts.

II
BOY AT CHRIST'S TREE

But I am a novelist, and, it seems, I composed one “story” myself. Why do I write: “it seems”, because I myself probably know what I wrote, but I keep imagining that this happened somewhere and sometime, this is exactly what happened just before Christmas, on some kind of in a huge city and in terrible frost.

I imagine there was a boy in the basement, but he was still very small, about six years old or even younger. This boy woke up in the morning in a damp and cold basement. He was dressed in some kind of robe and was shaking. His breath flew out in white steam, and he, sitting in the corner on a chest, out of boredom, deliberately let this steam out of his mouth and amused himself by watching it fly out. But he really wanted to eat. Several times in the morning he approached the bunk, where his sick mother lay on a thin bedding like a pancake and on some kind of bundle under her head instead of a pillow. How did she end up here? She must have arrived with her boy from a foreign city and suddenly fell ill. The owner of the corners was captured by the police two days ago; the tenants scattered, it was a holiday, and the only one left, the robe, had been lying dead drunk for the whole day, without even waiting for the holiday. In another corner of the room, some eighty-year-old old woman, who had once lived somewhere as a nanny, but was now dying alone, was moaning from rheumatism, groaning, grumbling and grumbling at the boy, so that he was already afraid to come close to her corner. He got something to drink somewhere in the hallway, but couldn’t find a crust anywhere, and for the tenth time he already went to wake up his mother. He finally felt terrified in the darkness: evening had already begun long ago, but the fire had not been lit. Feeling his mother’s face, he was amazed that she did not move at all and became as cold as a wall. “It’s very cold here,” he thought, stood for a while, unconsciously forgetting his hand on the dead woman’s shoulder, then he breathed on his fingers to warm them, and suddenly, rummaging for his cap on the bunk, slowly, gropingly, he walked out of the basement. He would have gone even earlier, but he was still afraid of the big dog upstairs, on the stairs, which had been howling all day at the neighbors' doors. But the dog was no longer there, and he suddenly went outside.

Lord, what a city! He had never seen anything like this before. Where he came from, it was so dark at night, there was only one lantern on the entire street. Low wooden houses are closed with shutters; on the street, as soon as it gets dark, there is no one, everyone shuts up in their homes, and only whole packs of dogs howl, hundreds and thousands of them, howl and bark all night. But there it was so warm and they gave him something to eat, but here - Lord, if only he could eat! And what a knock and thunder there is, what light and people, horses and carriages, and frost, frost! Frozen steam rises from the driven horses, from their hot breathing muzzles; Horseshoes ring on the stones through the loose snow, and everyone is pushing so hard, and, God, I really want to eat, even just a piece of something, and my fingers suddenly hurt so much. A peace officer walked by and turned away so as not to notice the boy.

Here is the street again - oh, how wide! Here they will probably be crushed like that; how they all scream, run and drive, and the light, the light! And what's that? Wow, what a big glass, and behind the glass there is a room, and in the room there is wood up to the ceiling; this is a Christmas tree, and on the tree there are so many lights, so many golden pieces of paper and apples, and all around there are dolls and little horses; and children are running around the room, dressed up, clean, laughing and playing, and eating, and drinking something. This girl started dancing with the boy, what a pretty girl! Here comes the music, you can hear it through the glass. The boy looks, marvels, and even laughs, but his fingers and toes are already hurting, and his hands have become completely red, they no longer bend and it hurts to move. And suddenly the boy remembered that his fingers hurt so much, he began to cry and ran on, and now again he sees through another glass a room, again there are trees, but on the tables there are all kinds of pies - almond, red, yellow, and four people are sitting there rich ladies, and whoever comes, they give him pies, and the door opens every minute, many gentlemen come in from the street. The boy crept up, suddenly opened the door and entered. Wow, how they shouted and waved at him! One lady quickly came up and put a penny in his hand, and she opened the door to the street for him. How scared he was! And the penny immediately rolled out and rang down the steps: he could not bend his red fingers and hold it. The boy ran out and went as quickly as possible, but he didn’t know where. He wants to cry again, but he’s too afraid, and he runs and runs and blows on his hands. And melancholy takes over him, because he suddenly felt so lonely and terrible, and suddenly, Lord! So what is this again? People are standing in a crowd and marveling: on the window behind the glass there are three dolls, small, dressed in red and green dresses and very, very lifelike! Some old man sits and seems to be playing a large violin, two others stand right there and play small violins, and shake their heads to the beat, and look at each other, and their lips move, they talk, they really talk - only now You can't hear it because of the glass. And at first the boy thought that they were alive, but when he realized that they were dolls, he suddenly laughed. He had never seen such dolls and did not know that such existed! And he wants to cry, but the dolls are so funny. Suddenly it seemed to him that someone grabbed him by the robe from behind: a big, angry boy stood nearby and suddenly hit him on the head, tore off his cap, and kicked him from below. The boy rolled to the ground, then they screamed, he was stupefied, he jumped up and ran and ran, and suddenly he ran into he doesn’t know where, into a gateway, into someone else’s yard, and sat down behind some firewood: “They won’t find anyone here, and it’s dark.”


He sat down and huddled, but he couldn’t catch his breath from fear, and suddenly, quite suddenly, he felt so good: his arms and legs suddenly stopped hurting and it became so warm, so warm, like on a stove; Now he shuddered all over: oh, but he was about to fall asleep! How nice it is to fall asleep here: “I’ll sit here and go look at the dolls again,” the boy thought and grinned, remembering them, “just like alive!” And suddenly he heard his mother singing a song above him. “Mom, I’m sleeping, oh, how good it is to sleep here!”

“Let’s go to my Christmas tree, boy,” a quiet voice suddenly whispered above him.

He thought it was all his mother, but no, not her; He doesn’t see who called him, but someone bent over him and hugged him in the darkness, and he extended his hand and... and suddenly - oh, what a light! Oh, what a tree! And it’s not a Christmas tree, he’s never seen such trees before! Where is he now: everything glitters, everything shines and there are dolls all around - but no, these are all boys and girls, only so bright, they all circle around him, fly, they all kiss him, take him, carry him with them, yes and he himself flies, and he sees: his mother is looking and laughing at him joyfully.

- Mother! Mother! Oh, how nice it is here, mom! - the boy shouts to her, and again kisses the children, and he wants to tell them as soon as possible about those dolls behind the glass. -Who are you, boys? Who are you girls? - he asks, laughing and loving them.

“This is Christ’s Christmas tree,” they answer him. “Christ always has a Christmas tree on this day for little children who don’t have their own tree there...” And he found out that these boys and girls were all just like him, children, but some were still frozen in their baskets, in which they were thrown onto the stairs to the doors of St. Petersburg officials, others suffocated in the chukhonkas, from the orphanage while being fed, others died at the withered breasts of their mothers during the Samara famine, others suffocated in third-class carriages from the stench, and yet they are all here now, they are all now like angels, they are all with Christ, and he himself is in the midst of them, and stretches out his hands to them, and blesses them and their sinful mothers... And the mothers of these children are all standing right there, on the sidelines, and crying; everyone recognizes their boy or girl, and they fly up to them and kiss them, wipe away their tears with their hands and beg them not to cry, because they feel so good here...

And downstairs the next morning, the janitors found the small corpse of a boy who had run and frozen to collect firewood; They also found his mother... She died before him; both met with the Lord God in heaven.

And why did I compose such a story, which does not fit into an ordinary reasonable diary, especially a writer’s? And he also promised stories mainly about actual events! But that’s the point, it seems and seems to me that all this could really happen - that is, what happened in the basement and behind the firewood, and there about the Christmas tree at Christ’s - I don’t know how to tell you , could it happen or not? That's why I'm a novelist, to invent things.

I
BOY WITH A HANDLE

Children are strange people, they dream and imagine. Before the Christmas tree and just before Christmas, I kept meeting on the street, on a certain corner, one boy, no more than seven years old. In the terrible frost, he was dressed almost like summer clothes, but his neck was tied with some kind of old clothes, which means that someone had equipped him when they sent him. He walked “with a pen”; This is a technical term and means to beg for alms. The term was invented by these boys themselves. There are many like him, they spin on your road and howl something they have learned by heart; but this one did not howl and spoke somehow innocently and unusually and looked trustingly into my eyes - therefore, he was just starting his profession. In response to my questions, he said that he had a sister who was unemployed and ill; maybe it’s true, but only I found out later that there are a lot of these boys: they are sent out “with a pen” even in the most terrible frost, and if they don’t get anything, then they will probably be beaten. Having collected kopecks, the boy returns with red, numb hands to some basement, where some gang of negligent workers are drinking, the same ones who, “having gone on strike at the factory on Sunday on Saturday, return to work no earlier than on Wednesday evening.” . There, in the basements, their hungry and beaten wives are drinking with them, and their hungry babies are squealing right there. Vodka, and dirt, and debauchery, and most importantly, vodka. With the collected pennies, the boy is immediately sent to the tavern, and he brings more wine. For fun, sometimes they pour a scythe into his mouth and laugh when, with his breathing stopped, he falls almost unconscious on the floor.


...and I put bad vodka in my mouth
Ruthlessly poured...

When he grows up, he is quickly sold off to a factory somewhere, but everything he earns, he is again obliged to bring to the careless workers, and they again drink away. But even before the factory, these children become complete criminals. They wander around the city and know places in different basements where they can crawl into and where they can spend the night unnoticed. One of them spent several nights in a row with one janitor in some kind of basket, and he never noticed him. Of course, they become thieves. Theft turns into a passion even among eight-year-old children, sometimes even without any consciousness of the criminality of the action. In the end they endure everything - hunger, cold, beatings - for only one thing, for freedom, and run away from their negligent people to wander away from themselves. This wild creature sometimes does not understand anything, neither where he lives, nor what nation he is, whether there is a God, whether there is a sovereign; even such people convey things about them that are incredible to hear, and yet they are all facts.

II
BOY AT CHRIST'S TREE

But I am a novelist, and, it seems, I composed one “story” myself. Why do I write: “it seems”, because I myself probably know what I wrote, but I keep imagining that this happened somewhere and sometime, this is exactly what happened just before Christmas, on some kind of in a huge city and in terrible frost.

I imagine there was a boy in the basement, but he was still very small, about six years old or even younger. This boy woke up in the morning in a damp and cold basement. He was dressed in some kind of robe and was shaking. His breath flew out in white steam, and he, sitting in the corner on a chest, out of boredom, deliberately let this steam out of his mouth and amused himself by watching it fly out. But he really wanted to eat. Several times in the morning he approached the bunk, where his sick mother lay on a thin bedding like a pancake and on some kind of bundle under her head instead of a pillow. How did she end up here? She must have arrived with her boy from a foreign city and suddenly fell ill. The owner of the corners was captured by the police two days ago; the tenants scattered, it was a holiday, and the only one left, the robe, had been lying dead drunk for the whole day, without even waiting for the holiday. In another corner of the room, some eighty-year-old old woman, who had once lived somewhere as a nanny, but was now dying alone, was moaning from rheumatism, groaning, grumbling and grumbling at the boy, so that he was already afraid to come close to her corner. He got something to drink somewhere in the hallway, but couldn’t find a crust anywhere, and for the tenth time he already went to wake up his mother. He finally felt terrified in the darkness: evening had already begun long ago, but the fire had not been lit. Feeling his mother’s face, he was amazed that she did not move at all and became as cold as a wall. “It’s very cold here,” he thought, stood for a while, unconsciously forgetting his hand on the dead woman’s shoulder, then he breathed on his fingers to warm them, and suddenly, rummaging for his cap on the bunk, slowly, gropingly, he walked out of the basement. He would have gone even earlier, but he was still afraid of the big dog upstairs, on the stairs, which had been howling all day at the neighbors' doors. But the dog was no longer there, and he suddenly went outside.

Lord, what a city! He had never seen anything like this before. Where he came from, it was so dark at night, there was only one lantern on the entire street. Low wooden houses are closed with shutters; on the street, when it gets a little dark, there is no one, everyone shuts up in their homes, and only whole packs of dogs howl, hundreds and thousands of them, howl and bark all night. But there it was so warm and they gave him something to eat, but here - Lord, if only he could eat! And what a knock and thunder there is, what light and people, horses and carriages, and frost, frost! Frozen steam rises from the driven horses, from their hot breathing muzzles; Horseshoes ring on the stones through the loose snow, and everyone is pushing so hard, and, God, I really want to eat, even just a piece of something, and my fingers suddenly hurt so much. A peace officer walked by and turned away so as not to notice the boy.

Here is the street again - oh, how wide! Here they will probably be crushed like that; how they all scream, run and drive, and the light, the light! And what's that? Wow, what a big glass, and behind the glass there is a room, and in the room there is wood up to the ceiling; this is a Christmas tree, and on the tree there are so many lights, so many golden pieces of paper and apples, and all around there are dolls and little horses; and children are running around the room, dressed up, clean, laughing and playing, and eating, and drinking something. This girl started dancing with the boy, what a pretty girl! Here comes the music, you can hear it through the glass. The boy looks, marvels, and even laughs, but his fingers and toes are already hurting, and his hands have become completely red, they no longer bend and it hurts to move. And suddenly the boy remembered that his fingers hurt so much, he cried and ran on, and now again he sees through another glass a room, again there are trees, but on the tables there are all kinds of pies - almond, red, yellow, and four people are sitting there rich ladies, and whoever comes, they give him pies, and the door opens every minute, many gentlemen come in from the street. The boy crept up, suddenly opened the door and entered. Wow, how they shouted and waved at him! One lady quickly came up and put a penny in his hand, and she opened the door to the street for him. How scared he was! And the penny immediately rolled out and rang down the steps: he could not bend his red fingers and hold it. The boy ran out and went as quickly as possible, but he didn’t know where. He wants to cry again, but he’s too afraid, and he runs and runs and blows on his hands. And melancholy takes over him, because he suddenly felt so lonely and terrible, and suddenly, Lord! So what is this again? People are standing in a crowd and marveling: on the window behind the glass there are three dolls, small, dressed in red and green dresses and very, very lifelike! Some old man sits and seems to be playing a large violin, two others stand right there and play small violins, and shake their heads to the beat, and look at each other, and their lips move, they talk, they really talk - only now You can't hear it because of the glass. And at first the boy thought that they were alive, but when he realized that they were dolls, he suddenly laughed. He had never seen such dolls and did not know that such existed! And he wants to cry, but the dolls are so funny. Suddenly it seemed to him that someone grabbed him by the robe from behind: a big, angry boy stood nearby and suddenly hit him on the head, tore off his cap, and kicked him from below. The boy rolled to the ground, then they screamed, he was stunned, he jumped up and ran and ran, and suddenly he ran into he doesn’t know where, into a gateway, into someone else’s yard, and sat down behind some firewood: “They won’t find anyone here, and it’s dark.”

Fedor Mikhailovich Dostoevsky

(1821 - 1881)

BOY AT CHRIST'S TREE

But I am a novelist, and, it seems, I composed one “story” myself. Why do I write: “it seems”, because I myself probably know what I wrote, but I keep imagining that this happened somewhere and sometime, this is exactly what happened just before Christmas, in some huge city and in a terrible freezing.

I imagine there was a boy in the basement, but he was still very small, about six years old or even younger. This boy woke up in the morning in a damp and cold basement. He was dressed in some kind of robe and was shaking. His breath flew out in white steam, and he, sitting in the corner on a chest, out of boredom, deliberately let this steam out of his mouth and amused himself by watching it fly out. But he really wanted to eat. Several times in the morning he approached the bunk, where his sick mother lay on a thin bedding like a pancake and on some kind of bundle under her head instead of a pillow. How did she end up here? She must have arrived with her boy from a foreign city and suddenly fell ill. The owner of the corners was captured by the police two days ago; the tenants scattered, it was a holiday, and the only one left, the robe, had been lying dead drunk for the whole day, without even waiting for the holiday. In another corner of the room, some eighty-year-old old woman, who had once lived somewhere as a nanny, but was now dying alone, was moaning from rheumatism, groaning, grumbling and grumbling at the boy, so that he was already afraid to come close to her corner. He got something to drink somewhere in the hallway, but couldn’t find a crust anywhere, and for the tenth time he already went to wake up his mother. He finally felt terrified in the darkness: evening had long since begun, but the fire had not been lit. Feeling his mother’s face, he was amazed that she did not move at all and became as cold as a wall. “It’s very cold here,” he thought, stood for a while, unconsciously forgetting his hand on the dead woman’s shoulder, then he breathed on his fingers to warm them up, and suddenly fumbling for his cap on the bunk, slowly, gropingly, he left the basement. He would have gone even earlier, but he was still afraid of the big dog upstairs, on the stairs, which had been howling all day at the neighbors’ doors. But the dog was no longer there, and he suddenly went outside.

Lord, what a city! He had never seen anything like this before. Where he came from, it’s so dark at night, there’s only one streetlight for the entire street. Low wooden houses are closed with shutters; on the street, when it gets a little dark, there is no one, everyone shuts up in their homes, and only whole packs of dogs howl, hundreds and thousands of them, howl and bark all night. But there it was so warm and they gave him something to eat, but here - Lord, if only he could eat! And what a knock and thunder there is, what light and people, horses and carriages, and frost, frost! Frozen steam rises from the driven horses, from their hot breathing muzzles; Through the loose snow, the horseshoes ring on the stones, and everyone is pushing so hard, and, Lord, I really want to eat, even just a piece of something, and my fingers suddenly feel so painful. A peace officer walked by and turned away so as not to notice the boy.

Here is the street again - oh, how wide! Here they will probably be crushed like that; how they all scream, run and drive, and the light, the light! And what's that? Wow, what a big glass, and behind the glass there is a room, and in the room there is wood up to the ceiling; this is a Christmas tree, and on the tree there are so many lights, so many golden pieces of paper and apples, and all around there are dolls and little horses; and children are running around the room, dressed up, clean, laughing and playing, and eating, and drinking something. This girl started dancing with the boy, what a pretty girl! Here comes the music, you can hear it through the glass. The boy looks, marvels, and even laughs, but his fingers and toes are already hurting, and his hands have become completely red, they no longer bend and it hurts to move. And suddenly the boy remembered that his fingers hurt so much, he cried and ran on, and now again he sees through another glass a room, again there are trees, but on the tables there are all kinds of pies - almond, red, yellow, and four people are sitting there rich ladies, and whoever comes, they give him pies, and the door opens every minute, many gentlemen come in from the street. The boy crept up, suddenly opened the door and entered. Wow, how they shouted and waved at him! One lady quickly came up and put a penny in his hand, and she opened the door to the street for him. How scared he was! And the penny immediately rolled out and rang down the steps: he could not bend his red fingers and hold it. The boy ran out and went as quickly as possible, but he didn’t know where. He wants to cry again, but he’s too afraid, and he runs and runs and blows on his hands. And melancholy takes over him, because he suddenly felt so lonely and terrible, and suddenly, Lord! So what is this again? People stand in a crowd and marvel; On the window behind the glass there are three dolls, small, dressed in red and green dresses and very, very lifelike! Some old man sits and seems to be playing a large violin, two others stand right there and play small violins, and shake their heads to the beat, and look at each other, and their lips move, they talk, they really talk - only now You can't hear it because of the glass. And at first the boy thought that they were alive, but when he realized that they were dolls, he suddenly laughed. He had never seen such dolls and did not know that such existed! And he wants to cry, but the dolls are so funny. Suddenly it seemed to him that someone grabbed him by the robe from behind: a big, angry boy stood nearby and suddenly hit him on the head, tore off his cap, and kicked him from below. The boy rolled to the ground, then they screamed, he was stupefied, he jumped up and ran and ran, and suddenly he ran into he doesn’t know where, into a gateway, into someone else’s yard, and sat down behind some firewood: “They won’t find anyone here, and it’s dark.”

He sat down and huddled, but he couldn’t catch his breath from fear, and suddenly, quite suddenly, he felt so good: his arms and legs suddenly stopped hurting and it became so warm, so warm, like on a stove; Now he shuddered all over: oh, but he was about to fall asleep! How nice it is to fall asleep here: “I’ll sit here and go look at the dolls again,” the boy thought and grinned, remembering them, “just like they’re alive!” And suddenly he heard his mother singing a song above him. - Mom, I’m sleeping, oh, how good it is to sleep here!

“Let’s go to my Christmas tree, boy,” a quiet voice suddenly whispered above him. He thought it was all his mother, but no, not her; He doesn’t see who called him, but someone bent over him and hugged him in the darkness, and he extended his hand and... and suddenly, - oh, what a light! Oh, what a tree! And it’s not a Christmas tree, he’s never seen such trees before! Where is he now: everything glitters, everything shines and there are all dolls all around - but no, these are all boys and girls, only so bright, they all circle around him, fly, they all kiss him, take him, carry him with them, yes and he himself flies, and he sees: his mother is looking and laughing at him joyfully.

Mother! Mother! Oh, how nice it is here, mom! - the boy shouts to her, and again kisses the children, and he wants to tell them as soon as possible about those dolls behind the glass. - Who are you, boys? Who are you girls? - he asks, laughing and loving them.

“This is Christ’s Christmas tree,” they answer him. - Christ always has a Christmas tree on this day for little children who don’t have their own tree there...

And he found out that these boys and girls were all just like him, children, but some were frozen in their baskets, in which they were thrown onto the stairs to the doors of St. Petersburg officials, others suffocated among the little girls, from the orphanage on food, thirds died at the withered breasts of their mothers (during the Samara famine), fourths suffocated in third-class carriages from the stench, and now they are all here, all of them are now like angels, all of Christ, and he himself is in the midst of them, and reaches out to hands, and blesses them and their sinful mothers... And the mothers of these children all stand right there, on the sidelines, and cry; each one recognizes their boy or girl, and they fly up to them and kiss them, wipe away their tears with their hands and beg them not to cry, because they feel so good here... And downstairs, the next morning, the janitors found the small corpse of someone who had run and froze to collect firewood boy; They also found his mother... She died before him; both met with the Lord God in Heaven.

The little Christmas story “The Boy at Christ’s Christmas Tree” was written by F.I. Dostoevsky. It very much resonates with the story of the great Danish storyteller H. H. Andersen “The Little Match Girl”. If you think about them, you immediately remember the terrible fate of children, guilty only of being poor and therefore deprived of all the joys that are due to them. Their destiny is unfulfilled dreams and suffering. Below will be a brief summary of “The Boy at Christ’s Christmas Tree” - a masterpiece of the Russian genius.

History of creation

After Fyodor Mikhailovich took his six-year-old daughter Lyubochka to a cheerful children's ball and a beautiful Christmas tree on December 26 in 1876, the next day he met several times on the streets of St. Petersburg a boy of about seven years old begging for alms. Such children are usually sent out into the street in any frost to get money, and when they return, adults take every penny from them and drink themselves into unconsciousness. These contrasting impressions formed the basis of the work “The Boy at Christ’s Christmas Tree,” which was published at the end of January 1877.

Introduction

The story consists of two parts. In the first, the author describes the children of factory workers. These poor fellows live in completely inhuman conditions, renting not a room, but only a corner. They cease to be people, driving their young children away in any weather to collect alms.

The child begging called himself “the boy with the pen.” The parents immediately drink the money they bring. Sometimes, in order to laugh at a child, vodka is forcibly poured into his mouth, and from this poison he, choking, falls helplessly to the floor. When the boys grow up, they are sent to work in a factory, their money is taken from them and they are drunk again. To survive, children start stealing and quickly get used to cheating, without even realizing that they are committing a crime.

Plot plot

The novelist “seems” that he has composed a story about events that are actually happening somewhere. In his opinion, all events take place during severe frosts in a huge city. His hero, a boy of five or six years old, woke up in a nasty, cold, smelly basement. We begin to retell the summary of “The Boy at Christ’s Christmas Tree.”

The child was very cold and hungry, but no one, not even his mother, who lay seriously ill in oblivion, paid any attention to him. He amused himself by exhaling air from his mouth, and it turned into a small white cloud. So the whole day passed, during which he did not find a single crust of bread. The day ended, but no one lit a fire. The boy, in bewilderment, tried to wake up his mother, but for some reason she did not wake up and became cold as the walls.

Continuation of the story

Then he found his cap and groped his way out of the basement. The boy came from a small town where the shutters were always closed in the evenings, but he was always given something to eat. Oh, how he wanted to eat now! And here, on the wide, bright streets, life is in full swing.

Outside the windows he sees a large tree, a toy horse, and cheerful children running and playing. This rich and beautiful world, which he has never seen before, arouses admiration for the boy. Meanwhile, he was completely frozen: his fingers and toes turned red and stopped bending. He cried and ran on. Suddenly, through the glass, he saw a table laden with pies, at which the ladies were sitting and treating everyone who came to them. Further, the summary of “The Boy at Christ’s Christmas Tree” becomes even sadder. The boy made his way into the house, but he was quickly escorted out, thrusting a penny into his numb fingers, which he could not hold with them, and it rolled away. The boy ran off to an unknown destination. He is both scared and sad. But suddenly he saw in the window dolls dressed in beautiful multi-colored dresses, and next to them - an old violinist. Suddenly our baby became happy. Only his joy was short-lived. This is indicated by the summary of “The Boy at Christ’s Christmas Tree.” An angry big boy ran at him, tore his cap from his head, and kicked him. The baby fell and rolled. He was terribly scared and ran into some yard and hid behind some firewood. Suddenly he felt warm and warm and wanted to fall asleep.

Ending

Then he heard (as F. M. Dostoevsky continues his story “The Boy at Christ’s Christmas Tree”) his mother’s affectionate voice. But another quiet voice called him to the tree.

Someone bent over him, picked him up, and then a miracle happened: everything began to shine, a decorated Christmas tree appeared, and girls and boys ran around, began to kiss him and fly with him. And mom stands aside and smiles. The boy wants to tell everyone about the dolls he saw and find out where he is now. “Girls and boys, who are you?” - he asks his new friends and learns from them that they all died and became angels, and Christ always arranges a Christmas tree for them on this day. They are all happy here, just like their mothers are happy.

The final

In the morning, janitors behind the woodpile found the frozen corpse of a little boy. They also found his dead mother. It seems to the author that all this could have happened in reality, but he doesn’t know what to say about the events in heaven. It’s no coincidence that he is a writer, he could come up with anything - that’s his profession.

Characters of the story

The main character of the story is a nameless boy, to whom the author deliberately did not give a name, because his name is Legion. Such a terrible story can happen to anyone. This kind and defenseless baby can subsequently grow up and become the “boy with a hand” from the first part of the story. But for now, this is an unfortunate hungry and frozen child that no one needs. All the main characters of “The Boy at Christ’s Christmas Tree” will pass before us.

The residents of the basement renting corners treat him with poorly hidden malice or complete indifference: a completely insensitive drunken factory worker who is fast asleep, and an old woman embittered from rheumatic pains.

A policeman tries not to notice him on a festive street, deliberately turning away.

The baby is kicked out just before Christmas, instead of being fed and warmed by rich ladies. They thereby violate Russian Christmas and Yuletide traditions.

“The Boy at Christ’s Christmas Tree”: analysis

If in the first part of the story we are presented with a real, rough and cruel world, then in the second there is a mixture of reality and a fantastic, illusory story, which are contrasted in two forms. What does the analysis say? The boy at Christ's Christmas tree, only after dying and going to heaven, knew happiness, kindness and mercy. In life, he saw only the world behind the glass of shining windows, where everyone is happy and having fun, eating tasty and satisfying food and receiving gifts.

In addition, he saw that there was a beautiful doll world in which dolls were contrasted with living, callous, soulless people. A kid who freezes on the streets of a big city is neither interesting nor needed by anyone. This is the complete bitter truth that F. M. Dostoevsky reveals. He emphasizes at the end of the story that at Christ’s Christmas tree there are a lot of children who died without knowing kindness and mercy.

The writer wants to reach the hearts of people by writing the story “The Boy at Christ’s Christmas Tree.” With his fairy tale, Dostoevsky calls for help to all disadvantaged children. Unhappy and abandoned, and therefore lost, his children find peace and tranquility only in heaven.

“The Boy at Christ’s Christmas Tree”: reviews

Every single modern reader highly recommends familiarizing yourself with this work. It carries a huge semantic load and has great moral and moral significance. This touching and sad story invites everyone who has a good life to look back, so that other people’s misfortunes will resonate with pain in their hearts. Readers believe that it is useful to discuss the work with children who grow up without experiencing grief, and whose wishes are often fulfilled. They should know that in our time there are orphanages where children live not too badly, but they lack love and affection, real family life, their own corner. We need to teach ourselves and our children to appreciate what everyone has and not to complain about life. Some readers regret that this work is not taught in school.

F. M. Dostoevsky himself read this work in public more than once and always evoked an emotional response from listeners.

Very briefly, a beggar, unexpectedly orphaned boy ends up on Christ’s Christmas tree. The Christmas tree turns out to be his dying dreams. In the morning his little corpse is found.

Boy with a pen

In front of the tree and on the tree, the narrator constantly sees a little boy “with a hand” - this is what they call those who beg for alms. These little beggars come from dysfunctional families, and their future is as bleak as the present of their parents - drunkenness, theft, an unhappy family and eternally hungry children.

Boy at Christ's Christmas tree

A little boy, about six years old, wakes up in a damp and cold basement. He is very hungry and tries to wake up his sick mother. He doesn’t succeed, because his mother died, but the boy does not yet understand what death is. He is only surprised by his mother’s cold and motionless face.

Without waking her up, he goes outside. Wandering around the city, the boy looks into the windows, in one he sees a girl dancing with a boy, in the other - four ladies who give pies to everyone who comes. The boy also entered their house. One of the ladies hastily hands him a penny and opens the door herself. The frightened boy drops the coin and runs away.

He comes across a crowd of people watching a puppet show, which he really enjoys. But soon he is beaten by an older boy. The child is forced to run away.

Running into the gateway, he settles down to get some firewood. He feels warm and good. The boy hears a voice inviting him to the Christmas tree. He sees a magnificent Christmas tree and many joyful boys and girls. He himself rejoices and has fun being next to them. These are children like him, who died at an early age for various reasons (some froze, others suffocated).

In the morning, janitors find the body of a frozen little boy, and a little later they find the body of his mother, who died a little earlier.



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