Winnie the Pooh and all, all, all. “Winnie the Pooh and all-all-all Summary of a milne Winnie

Winnie the Pooh is a teddy bear, a friend of Christopher Robin, with whom a variety of stories happen. One day, going out into a clearing, Vinnie sees a tall oak tree, at the top of which something is buzzing! No one will buzz in vain, and Winnie the Pooh tries to climb the tree for honey. Having fallen into the bushes, the bear goes to Christopher Robin for help. Taking the blue balloon from the boy, Winnie the Pooh rises into the air, singing “Tuchka’s special song”:

“I am Cloud, Cloud, Cloud, / And not a bear at all, / Oh, how nice it is for Cloud / to fly across the sky!”

But the bees behave “suspiciously,” according to Winnie the Pooh, that is, they suspect something. One after another they fly out of the hollow and sting Winnie the Pooh. (“These are the wrong bees,” the bear understands, “they probably make the wrong honey.”) And Winnie the Pooh asks the boy to shoot down the ball with a gun. “He’ll go bad,” protests Christopher Robin. “And if you don’t shoot, I’ll be spoiled,” says Winnie the Pooh. And the boy, understanding what to do, knocks down the ball. Winnie the Pooh smoothly falls to the ground. True, after this, for a whole week the bear’s paws stuck up and he could not move them. If a fly landed on his nose, he had to blow it away: “Pooh!” Puhhh!” Perhaps that is why he was called Pooh.

One day Pooh went to visit the Rabbit, who lived in a hole. Winnie the Pooh was always not averse to “refreshing himself,” but while visiting the Rabbit, he obviously allowed himself too much and therefore, when he got out, he got stuck in the hole. True friend Winnie the Pooh, Christopher Robin, read books aloud to him for a whole week, while inside, in the hole. The rabbit (with Pooh's permission) used his back legs as a towel rack. The fluff became thinner and thinner, and then Christopher Robin said: “It’s time!” and grabbed Pooh's front paws, and the Rabbit grabbed Christopher Robin, and the Rabbit's Relatives and Friends, of whom there were an awful lot, grabbed the Rabbit and began to drag with all their might, and Winnie the Pooh jumped out of the hole like a cork from a bottle, and Christopher Robin and Rabbit and everyone else flew upside down!

In addition to Winnie the Pooh and the Rabbit, there are also piglets Piglet (“Very Little Creature”), Owl (she is literate and can even write her name “SAVA”), and the always sad donkey Eeyore who lives in the forest. A donkey's tail once disappeared, but Pooh managed to find it. In search of a tail, Pooh wandered to the all-knowing Owl. The owl lived in a real castle, according to the little bear. On the door she had a bell with a button and a bell with a cord. Under the bell there was a notice: “PLEASE LEAVE IF THEY DO NOT OPEN.” Christopher Robin wrote the ad because even Owl couldn't do it. Pooh tells Owl that Eeyore has lost his tail and asks for help finding it. The Owl embarks on theoretical discussions, and poor Pooh, who, as you know, has sawdust in his head, soon ceases to understand what he is talking about, and answers the Owl’s questions in turn with “yes” and “no.” To the next “no,” Owl asks in surprise: “What, you didn’t see?” and takes Pooh to look at the bell and the announcement under it. Pooh looks at the bell and cord and suddenly realizes that he has seen something very similar somewhere. The Owl explains that one day in the forest she saw this lace and called, then she called very loudly, and the cord came off... Pooh explains to the Owl that Eeyore really needed this cord, that he loved it, one might say, was attached to it. With these words, Pooh unhooks the lace and carries Eeyore, and Christopher Robin nails him in place.

Sometimes new animals appear in the forest, such as Kanga's mother and Little Roo.

At first, the Rabbit decides to teach Kanga a lesson (he is outraged that she carries a child in her pocket, he tries to count how many pockets he would need if he, too, decided to carry children in this way - it turns out that seventeen, and one more for a handkerchief! ): steal Little Roo and hide him, and when Kanga starts looking for him, tell her “AHA!” in such a tone that she would understand everything. But so that Kanga does not immediately notice the loss, Piglet must jump into her pocket instead of Little Roo. And Winnie the Pooh must speak to Kanga very inspiredly, so that she turns away even for a minute, then the Rabbit will be able to run away with Little Roo. The plan succeeds, and Kanga discovers the substitution only when he gets home. She knows that Christopher Robin will not allow anyone to hurt Little Roo, and decides to play a prank on Piglet. He, however, tries to say “AHA!”, but this has no effect on Kanga. She prepares a bath for Piglet, continuing to call him "Roo". Piglet unsuccessfully tries to explain to Kanga who he really is, but she pretends that she doesn’t understand what’s going on. And now Piglet is already washed, and a spoonful of fish oil is waiting for him. He is saved from the medicine by the arrival of Christopher Robin. Piglet rushes to him in tears, begging him to confirm that he is not Little Roo. Christopher Robin confirms that this is not Roo, whom he just saw at Rabbit's, but refuses to recognize Piglet because Piglet is "an entirely different color." Kanga and Christopher Robin decide to name him Henry Puschel. But then the newly-minted Henry Puschel manages to wriggle out of Kanga’s hands and run away. He had never had to run so fast before! Only a hundred steps from the house does he stop running and roll on the ground to regain his own familiar and sweet color. So Little Roo and Kanga remain in the forest.

Another time, Tigger, an unknown animal, appears in the forest, smiling broadly and welcomingly. Pooh treats Tigger to honey, but it turns out that Tiggers don't like honey. Then the two of them go to visit Piglet, but it turns out that Tigers don’t even eat acorns. He also cannot eat the thistle that Eeyore gave to Tigger. Winnie the Pooh bursts out in poetry: “What to do with poor Tigger? / How can we save him? / After all, he who does not eat anything / cannot grow!”

The friends decide to go to Kanga, and there Tigger finally finds food he likes - this fish fat, Little Roo's hated medicine. So Tigger lives in Kanga's house and always gets fish oil for breakfast, lunch and dinner. And when Kanga thought he needed some food, she would give him a spoonful or two of porridge. (“But I personally think,” Piglet used to say in such cases, “that he is already strong enough.”)

Events take their course: either the “expedition” goes to the North Pole, then Piglet is saved from the flood in Christopher Robin’s umbrella, then the storm destroys Owl’s house, and the donkey looks for a house for her (which turns out to be Piglet’s house), and Piglet goes to live with Winnie. Pooh, then Christopher Robin, having already learned to read and write, leaves (it’s not entirely clear how, but it’s clear that he’s leaving) from the forest...

The animals say goodbye to Christopher Robin, Eeyore writes a terribly complicated poem for this occasion, and when Christopher Robin, having read it to the end, looks up, he sees only Winnie the Pooh in front of him. The two of them go to the Enchanted Place. Christopher Robin tells Pooh different stories, which immediately get mixed up in his sawdust-filled head, and in the end knights him. Christopher Robin then asks the bear to promise that he will never forget him. Even when Christopher Robin turns a hundred years old. (“How old will I be then?” asks Pooh. “Ninety-nine,” answers Christopher Robin). “I promise,” Pooh nods his head. And they walk along the road.

And wherever they go and no matter what happens to them - “here, in the Enchanted Place on the top of the hill in the forest, the little boy will always, always play with his little bear.”

Year of writing:

1926

Reading time:

Description of the work:

“Winnie the Pooh and All-All-All” is a very famous fairy tale written by the English writer Alan Milne. The tale was originally published in 1926, and has since been translated into different languages and it is read by children and adults in different countries.

The hero of this fairy tale is the teddy bear Winnie the Pooh - a kind and stupid bear who is always willing to eat. Winnie the Pooh gained popularity in the USSR after the release of the cartoon "Winnie the Pooh and All-All-All", where main role The bear cub was voiced by Evgeny Leonov, and also after the retelling of the text in Russian, which was done by Boris Zokhoder. Read below for a summary of “Winnie the Pooh and Everything.”

Brief summary of the tale
Winnie the Pooh and everything, everything, everything

Winnie the Pooh is a teddy bear and a great friend of Christopher Robin. All kinds of stories happen to him. One day, going out into a clearing, Winnie the Pooh sees a tall oak tree, at the top of which something is buzzing: zhzhzhzhzhzh! No one will buzz in vain, and Winnie the Pooh tries to climb the tree for honey. Having fallen into the bushes, the bear goes to Christopher Robin for help. Taking a blue balloon from the boy, Winnie the Pooh rises into the air, singing “Tuchka’s special song”: “I am Tuchka, Tuchka, Tuchka, / And not a bear at all, / Oh, how nice it is for Tuchka / to fly across the sky!”

But the bees behave “suspiciously,” according to Winnie the Pooh, that is, they suspect something. One after another they fly out of the hollow and sting Winnie the Pooh. (“These are the wrong bees,” the bear understands, “they probably make the wrong honey.”) And Winnie the Pooh asks the boy to shoot down the ball with a gun. “He’ll go bad,” protests Christopher Robin. “And if you don’t shoot, I’ll be spoiled,” says Winnie the Pooh. And the boy, understanding what to do, knocks down the ball. Winnie the Pooh smoothly falls to the ground. True, after this, for a whole week the bear’s paws stuck up and he could not move them. If a fly landed on his nose, he had to blow it away: “Pooh! Puhhh!” Perhaps that is why he was called Pooh.

One day Pooh went to visit the Rabbit, who lived in a hole. Winnie the Pooh was always not averse to “refreshing himself,” but while visiting the Rabbit, he obviously allowed himself too much and therefore, when he got out, he got stuck in the hole. Winnie the Pooh's faithful friend, Christopher Robin, read books aloud to him for a whole week, while inside, in the hole. The rabbit (with Pooh's permission) used his back legs as a towel rack. The fluff became thinner and thinner, and then Christopher Robin said:

"It's time!" and grabbed Pooh's front paws, and the Rabbit grabbed Christopher Robin, and the Rabbit's Relatives and Friends, of whom there were an awful lot, grabbed the Rabbit and began to drag with all their might, and Winnie the Pooh jumped out of the hole like a cork from a bottle, and Christopher Robin and Rabbit and everyone else flew upside down!

In addition to Winnie the Pooh and the Rabbit, there are also piglet Piglet (“Very Little Creature”), Owl (she is literate and can even write her name “SAVA”), and the always sad donkey Eeyore who live in the forest. A donkey's tail once disappeared, but Pooh managed to find it. In search of a tail, Pooh wandered to the all-knowing Owl. The owl lived in a real castle, according to the little bear. On the door she had a bell with a button and a bell with a cord. There was a notice under the bell:

“PLEASE FALL OUT IF THEY DON’T OPEN.” Christopher Robin wrote the ad because even Owl couldn't do it. Pooh tells Owl that Eeyore has lost his tail and asks for help finding it. The owl embarks on theoretical discussions, and poor Pooh, who, as you know, has sawdust in his head, soon ceases to understand what he is talking about. we're talking about, and answers Owl’s questions in turn either “yes” or “no”. To the next “no,” Owl asks in surprise: “What, you didn’t see?” and takes Pooh to look at the bell and the announcement under it. Pooh looks at the bell and cord and suddenly realizes that he has seen something very similar somewhere. The Owl explains that one day in the forest she saw this lace and called, then she called very loudly, and the cord came off... Pooh explains to the Owl that Eeyore really needed this cord, that he loved it, one might say, was attached to it. With these words, Pooh unhooks the lace and carries Eeyore, and Christopher Robin nails him in place.

Sometimes new animals appear in the forest, such as Kanga's mother and Little Roo.

At first, the Rabbit decides to teach Kanga a lesson (he is outraged that she carries a child in her pocket, he tries to count how many pockets he would need if he, too, decided to carry children in this way - it turns out that seventeen, and one more for a handkerchief!) : Steal Little Roo and hide him, and when Kanga starts looking for him, tell her "AHA!" in such a tone that she would understand everything. But so that Kanga does not immediately notice the loss, Piglet must jump into her pocket instead of Little Roo. And Winnie the Pooh must speak to Kanga very inspiredly, so that she turns away even for a minute, then the Rabbit will be able to run away with Little Roo. The plan succeeds, and Kanga discovers the substitution only when he gets home. She knows that Christopher Robin will not allow anyone to hurt Little Roo, and decides to play a prank on Piglet. He, however, tries to say “AHA!”, but this has no effect on Kanga. She prepares a bath for Piglet, continuing to call him "Roo". Piglet unsuccessfully tries to explain to Kanga who he really is, but she pretends that she doesn’t understand what’s going on. And now Piglet is already washed, and a spoonful of fish oil is waiting for him. He is saved from the medicine by the arrival of Christopher Robin. Piglet rushes to him in tears, begging him to confirm that he is not Little Roo. Christopher Robin confirms that this is not Roo, whom he just saw at Rabbit's, but refuses to recognize Piglet because Piglet is "an entirely different color." Kanga and Christopher Robin decide to name him Henry Puschel. But then the newly-minted Henry Puschel manages to wriggle out of Kanga’s hands and run away. He had never had to run so fast before! Only a hundred steps from the house does he stop running and roll on the ground to regain his own familiar and sweet color. So Little Roo and Kanga remain in the forest.

Another time, Tigger, an unknown animal, appears in the forest, smiling broadly and welcomingly. Pooh treats Tigger to honey, but it turns out that Tiggers don't like honey. Then the two of them go to visit Piglet, but it turns out that Tigers don’t even eat acorns. He also cannot eat the thistle that Eeyore gave to Tigger. Winnie the Pooh bursts out in poetry: “What to do with poor Tigger? / How can we save him? / After all, he who does not eat anything / cannot grow!”

The friends decide to go to Kanga, and there Tigger finally finds food he likes - fish oil, Little Roo’s hated medicine. So Tigger lives in Kanga's house and always gets fish oil for breakfast, lunch and dinner. And when Kanga thought he needed some food, she would give him a spoonful or two of porridge. (“But I personally think,” Piglet used to say in such cases, “that he is already strong enough.”)

Events take their course: either the “expedition” goes to the North Pole, then Piglet is saved from the flood in Christopher Robin’s umbrella, then the storm destroys Owl’s house, and the donkey looks for a house for her (which turns out to be Piglet’s house), and Piglet goes to live with Winnie. Pooh, then Christopher Robin, having already learned to read and write, leaves (it’s not entirely clear how, but it’s clear that he’s leaving) from the forest...

The animals say goodbye to Christopher Robin, Eeyore writes a terribly complicated poem for this occasion, and when Christopher Robin, having read it to the end, looks up, he sees only Winnie the Pooh in front of him. The two of them go to the Enchanted Place. Christopher Robin tells Pooh different stories, which immediately get mixed up in his sawdust-filled head, and in the end knights him. Christopher Robin then asks the bear to promise that he will never forget him. Even when Christopher Robin turns a hundred years old. (“How old will I be then?” asks Pooh. “Ninety-nine,” answers Christopher Robin). “I promise,” Pooh nods his head. And they walk along the road.

And wherever they go and no matter what happens to them - “here, in the Enchanted Place on the top of the hill in the forest, the little boy will always, always play with his little bear.”

You have read the summary of “Winnie the Pooh and Everything.” We also invite you to visit the Summary section to read the summaries of other popular writers.

Winnie the Pooh is a teddy bear and a great friend of Christopher Robin. All kinds of stories happen to him. One day, going out into a clearing, Winnie the Pooh sees a tall oak tree, at the top of which something is buzzing: zhzhzhzhzhzh! No one will buzz in vain, and Winnie the Pooh tries to climb the tree for honey. Having fallen into the bushes, the bear goes to Christopher Robin for help. Taking a blue balloon from the boy, Winnie the Pooh rises into the air, singing “Tuchka’s special song”: “I am Tuchka, Tuchka, Tuchka, / And not a bear at all, / Oh, how nice it is for Tuchka / to fly across the sky!”

But the bees behave “suspiciously,” according to Winnie the Pooh, that is, they suspect something. One after another they fly out of the hollow and sting Winnie the Pooh. (“These are the wrong bees,” the bear understands, “they probably make the wrong honey.”) And Winnie the Pooh asks the boy to shoot down the ball with a gun. “He’ll go bad,” protests Christopher Robin. “And if you don’t shoot, I’ll be spoiled,” says Winnie the Pooh. And the boy, understanding what to do, knocks down the ball. Winnie the Pooh smoothly falls to the ground. True, after this, for a whole week the bear’s paws stuck up and he could not move them. If a fly landed on his nose, he had to blow it away: “Pooh!” Puhhh!” Perhaps that is why he was called Pooh.

One day Pooh went to visit the Rabbit, who lived in a hole. Winnie the Pooh was always not averse to “refreshing himself,” but while visiting the Rabbit, he obviously allowed himself too much and therefore, when he got out, he got stuck in the hole. Winnie the Pooh's faithful friend, Christopher Robin, read books aloud to him for a whole week, while inside, in the hole. The rabbit (with Pooh's permission) used his back legs as a towel rack. The fluff became thinner and thinner, and then Christopher Robin said: “It’s time!” and grabbed Pooh's front paws, and the Rabbit grabbed Christopher Robin, and the Rabbit's Relatives and Friends, of whom there were an awful lot, grabbed the Rabbit and began to drag with all their might, and Winnie the Pooh jumped out of the hole like a cork from a bottle, and Christopher Robin and Rabbit and everyone else flew upside down!

In addition to Winnie the Pooh and the Rabbit, there are also piglet Piglet (“Very Little Creature”), Owl (she is literate and can even write her name “SAVA”), and the always sad donkey Eeyore who live in the forest. A donkey's tail once disappeared, but Pooh managed to find it. In search of a tail, Pooh wandered to the all-knowing Owl. The owl lived in a real castle, according to the little bear. On the door she had a bell with a button and a bell with a cord. Under the bell there was a notice: “PLEASE LEAVE IF THEY DO NOT OPEN.” Christopher Robin wrote the ad because even Owl couldn't do it. Pooh tells Owl that Eeyore has lost his tail and asks for help finding it. The Owl launches into theoretical discussions, and poor Pooh, who, as you know, has sawdust in his head, soon ceases to understand what he is talking about, and answers the Owl’s questions in turn with “yes” and “no.” To the next “no,” Owl asks in surprise: “What, you didn’t see?” and takes Pooh to look at the bell and the announcement under it. Pooh looks at the bell and cord and suddenly realizes that he has seen something very similar somewhere. The Owl explains that one day in the forest she saw this lace and called, then she called very loudly, and the cord came off... Pooh explains to the Owl that Eeyore really needed this cord, that he loved it, one might say, was attached to it. With these words, Pooh unhooks the lace and carries Eeyore, and Christopher Robin nails him in place.

Sometimes new animals appear in the forest, such as Kanga's mother and Little Roo.

At first, the Rabbit decides to teach Kanga a lesson (he is outraged that she carries a child in her pocket, he tries to count how many pockets he would need if he, too, decided to carry children in this way - it turns out that seventeen, and one more for a handkerchief! ): steal Little Roo and hide him, and when Kanga starts looking for him, tell her "AHA!" in such a tone that she would understand everything. But so that Kanga does not immediately notice the loss, Piglet must jump into her pocket instead of Little Roo. And Winnie the Pooh must speak to Kanga very inspiredly, so that she turns away even for a minute, then the Rabbit will be able to run away with Little Roo. The plan succeeds, and Kanga discovers the substitution only when he gets home. She knows that Christopher Robin will not allow anyone to hurt Little Roo, and decides to play a prank on Piglet. He, however, tries to say “AHA!”, but this has no effect on Kanga. She prepares a bath for Piglet, continuing to call him "Roo". Piglet unsuccessfully tries to explain to Kanga who he really is, but she pretends that she doesn’t understand what’s going on. And now Piglet is already washed, and a spoonful of fish oil is waiting for him. He is saved from the medicine by the arrival of Christopher Robin. Piglet rushes to him in tears, begging him to confirm that he is not Little Roo. Christopher Robin confirms that this is not Roo, whom he just saw at Rabbit's, but refuses to recognize Piglet because Piglet is "an entirely different color." Kanga and Christopher Robin decide to name him Henry Puschel. But then the newly-minted Henry Puschel manages to wriggle out of Kanga’s hands and run away. He had never had to run so fast before! Only a hundred steps from the house does he stop running and roll on the ground to regain his own familiar and sweet color. So Little Roo and Kanga remain in the forest.

Another time, Tigger, an unknown animal, appears in the forest, smiling broadly and welcomingly. Pooh treats Tigger to honey, but it turns out that Tiggers don't like honey. Then the two of them go to visit Piglet, but it turns out that Tigers don’t even eat acorns. He also cannot eat the thistle that Eeyore gave to Tigger. Winnie the Pooh bursts out in poetry: “What to do with poor Tigger? / How can we save him? / After all, he who does not eat anything / cannot grow!”

The friends decide to go to Kanga, and there Tigger finally finds food he likes - fish oil, Little Roo’s hated medicine. So Tigger lives in Kanga's house and always gets fish oil for breakfast, lunch and dinner. And when Kanga thought he needed some food, she would give him a spoonful or two of porridge. (“But I personally think,” Piglet used to say in such cases, “that he is already strong enough.”)

Events take their course: either the “expedition” goes to the North Pole, then Piglet is saved from the flood in Christopher Robin’s umbrella, then the storm destroys Owl’s house, and the donkey looks for a house for her (which turns out to be Piglet’s house), and Piglet goes to live with Winnie. Pooh, then Christopher Robin, having already learned to read and write, leaves (it’s not entirely clear how, but it’s clear that he’s leaving) from the forest...

The animals say goodbye to Christopher Robin, Eeyore writes a terribly complicated poem for this occasion, and when Christopher Robin, having read it to the end, looks up, he sees only Winnie the Pooh in front of him. The two of them go to the Enchanted Place. Christopher Robin tells Pooh different stories, which immediately get mixed up in his sawdust-filled head, and in the end knights him. Christopher Robin then asks the bear to promise that he will never forget him. Even when Christopher Robin turns a hundred years old. (“How old will I be then?” asks Pooh. “Ninety-nine,” answers Christopher Robin). “I promise,” Pooh nods his head. And they walk along the road.

And wherever they go and no matter what happens to them - “here, in the Enchanted Place on the top of the hill in the forest, the little boy will always, always play with his little bear.”

Retold

Winnie the Pooh is a teddy bear and a great friend of Christopher Robin. All kinds of stories happen to him. One day, going out into a clearing, Winnie the Pooh sees a tall oak tree, at the top of which something is buzzing: zhzhzhzhzhzh! No one will buzz in vain, and Winnie the Pooh tries to climb the tree for honey. Having fallen into the bushes, the bear goes to Christopher Robin for help. Taking a blue balloon from the boy, Winnie the Pooh rises into the air, singing “Tuchka’s special song”: “I am Tuchka, Tuchka, Tuchka, / And not a bear at all, / Oh, how nice it is for Tuchka / to fly across the sky!”

But the bees behave “suspiciously,” according to Winnie the Pooh, that is, they suspect something. One after another they fly out of the hollow and sting Winnie the Pooh. (“These are the wrong bees,” the bear understands, “they probably make the wrong honey.”) And Winnie the Pooh asks the boy to shoot down the ball with a gun. “He’ll go bad,” protests Christopher Robin. “And if you don’t shoot, I’ll be spoiled,” says Winnie the Pooh. And the boy, understanding what to do, knocks down the ball. Winnie the Pooh smoothly falls to the ground. True, after this for a whole week, the bear’s paws stuck up, and he could not move them. If a fly landed on his nose, he had to blow it away: “Pooh!” Puhhh!” Perhaps that is why he was called Pooh.

One day Pooh went to visit the Rabbit, who lived in a hole. Winnie the Pooh was always not averse to “refreshing himself,” but while visiting the Rabbit, he obviously allowed himself too much and therefore, when he got out, he got stuck in the hole. Winnie the Pooh's faithful friend, Christopher Robin, read books aloud to him for a whole week, while inside, in the hole. The rabbit (with Pooh's permission) used his back legs as a towel rack. The fluff became thinner and thinner, and then Christopher Robin said: “It’s time!” and grabbed Pooh's front paws, and the Rabbit grabbed Christopher Robin, and the Rabbit's Relatives and Friends, of whom there were an awful lot, grabbed the Rabbit and began to drag with all their might, and Winnie the Pooh jumped out of the hole like a cork from a bottle, and Christopher Robin and Rabbit and everyone else flew upside down!

In addition to Winnie the Pooh and the Rabbit, there are also piglet Piglet (“Very Little Creature”), Owl (she is literate and can even write her name “SAVA”), and the always sad donkey Eeyore who live in the forest. A donkey's tail once disappeared, but Pooh managed to find it. In search of a tail, Pooh wandered to the all-knowing Owl. The owl lived in a real castle, according to the little bear. On the door she had a bell with a button and a bell with a cord. Under the bell there was a notice: “PLEASE LEAVE IF THEY DO NOT OPEN.” Christopher Robin wrote the ad because even Owl couldn't do it. Pooh tells Owl that Eeyore has lost his tail and asks for help finding it. The Owl launches into theoretical discussions, and poor Pooh, who, as you know, has sawdust in his head, soon ceases to understand what he is talking about, and answers the Owl’s questions in turn with “yes” and “no.” To the next “no,” Owl asks in surprise: “What, you didn’t see?” and takes Pooh to look at the bell and the announcement under it. Pooh looks at the bell and cord and suddenly realizes that he has seen something very similar somewhere. The owl explains that one day in the forest she saw this lace and called, then she rang very loudly, and the cord came off. Pooh explains to Owl that Eeyore really needs this lace, that he loved it, one might say, was attached to it. With these words, Pooh unhooks the lace and carries Eeyore, and Christopher Robin nails him in place.

Sometimes new animals appear in the forest, such as Kanga's mother and Little Roo.

The rabbit is outraged that Kanga carries the child in his pocket. He tries to count how many pockets he would need if he, too, decided to carry his children this way. It turns out that seventeen, and one more for a handkerchief! At first, Rabbit decides to teach Kanga a lesson: to steal Little Roo and hide him, and when Kanga starts looking for him, to tell her “AHA!” in such a tone that she would understand everything. But so that Kanga does not immediately notice the loss, Piglet must jump into her pocket instead of Little Roo. And Winnie the Pooh must speak to Kanga very inspiredly, so that she turns away even for a minute, then the Rabbit will be able to run away with Little Roo. The plan succeeds, and Kanga discovers the substitution only when he gets home. She knows that Christopher Robin will not allow anyone to hurt Little Roo, and decides to play a prank on Piglet. He, however, tries to say “AHA!”, but this has no effect on Kanga. She prepares a bath for Piglet, continuing to call him "Roo". Piglet unsuccessfully tries to explain to Kanga who he really is, but she pretends that she doesn’t understand what’s going on. And now Piglet is already washed, and a spoonful of fish oil is waiting for him. He is saved from the medicine by the arrival of Christopher Robin. Piglet rushes to him in tears, begging him to confirm that he is not Little Roo. Christopher Robin confirms that this is not Roo, whom he just saw at Rabbit's, but refuses to recognize Piglet because Piglet is "an entirely different color." Kanga and Christopher Robin decide to name him Henry Puschel. But then the newly-minted Henry Puschel manages to wriggle out of Kanga’s hands and run away. He had never had to run so fast before! Only a hundred steps from the house does he stop running and roll on the ground to regain his own familiar and sweet color. So Little Roo and Kanga remain in the forest.

Another time, Tigger, an unknown animal, appears in the forest, smiling broadly and welcomingly. Pooh treats Tigger to honey, but it turns out that Tiggers don't like honey. Then the two of them go to visit Piglet, but it turns out that Tigers don’t even eat acorns. He also cannot eat the thistle that Eeyore gave to Tigger. Winnie the Pooh bursts out in poetry: “What to do with poor Tigger? / How can we save him? / After all, he who does not eat anything / cannot grow!”

The friends decide to go to Kanga, and there Tigger finally finds food he likes - fish oil, Little Roo’s hated medicine. So Tigger lives in Kanga's house and always gets fish oil for breakfast, lunch and dinner. And when Kanga thought he needed some food, she would give him a spoonful or two of porridge. (“But I personally think,” Piglet used to say in such cases, “that he is already strong enough.”)

Events take their course. Either an “expedition” is sent to the North Pole, then Piglet is saved from the flood in Christopher Robin’s umbrella, then a storm destroys Owl’s house, and the donkey looks for a house for her (which turns out to be Piglet’s house). And Piglet himself goes to live with Winnie the Pooh, then Christopher Robin, having already learned to read and write, leaves (it’s not entirely clear how, but it’s clear that he’s leaving) from the forest...

The animals say goodbye to Christopher Robin, Eeyore writes a terribly complicated poem for this occasion, and when Christopher Robin, having read it to the end, looks up, he sees only Winnie the Pooh in front of him. The two of them go to the Enchanted Place. Christopher Robin tells Pooh different stories, which immediately get mixed up in his sawdust-filled head, and in the end knights him. Christopher Robin then asks the bear to promise that he will never forget him. Even when Christopher Robin turns a hundred years old. (“How old will I be then?” asks Pooh. “Ninety-nine,” answers Christopher Robin). “I promise,” Pooh nods his head. And they walk along the road.

“Winnie the Pooh and everything, everything, everything” - kind funny fairy tale about the adventures of a teddy bear and his faithful friends. Together they overcome difficulties, find exciting activities and enjoy every day.

Summary of “Winnie the Pooh and everything, everything, everything” for the reader’s diary

Name: “Winnie the Pooh and everything, everything, everything”

Number of pages: 206. Alexander Alan Milne. "Winnie the Pooh and everything, everything, everything." Publishing house "Children's Literature". 1978

Genre: Fairy Tale

Year of writing: 1925

Main characters

Christopher Robin is a kind and smart boy with a rich imagination.

Winnie the Pooh is a teddy bear, funny, cheerful with a sweet tooth.

Piglet is Winnie the Pooh's best friend, cheerful, but a little cowardly.

The rabbit is correct, responsible, very smart.

Owl is considered the wisest inhabitant of the forest, although he cannot even read.

Eeyore is an eternally sad donkey.

Kanga is the caring and sensible mother of little Roo.

Little Roo is a little prankster who loves to play more than anything else.

Tigger is boastful, narcissistic, but very kind.

Plot

Christopher Rodin had a favorite toy - the teddy bear Winnie the Pooh, and the boy's father often told him funny stories about the adventures of the bear cub.

So, in the first story, Winnie the Pooh went to get honey from wild bees, taking Christopher with him as an assistant. The little bear began to climb up hot-air balloon to reach the hollow with honey, but the bees decided to teach the uninvited guest a lesson. Winnie the Pooh asked Christopher to help him get down to the ground. He shot the ball, and the bear cub fell to the ground. He concluded that these were the wrong bees, who were probably making the wrong honey.

One day Winnie the Pooh was walking, singing funny songs, and when he saw a hole, he realized that his friend Rabbit lived there. Winnie the Pooh came to visit him and ate all his supplies of honey and condensed milk. The bear cub became so fat that he could not get out, and even Christopher could not help him. Winnie the Pooh had to wait a whole week to leave the norm.

One day Eeyore lost his own tail and was very upset about it. But it soon became clear that the tail was hanging on the Owl's doorbell. Winnie the Pooh returned the tail to the donkey, and he was very happy.

Winnie the Pooh and his friends - Piglet, Tigger, Kanga, Little Roo - had many more exciting adventures that always had a happy ending.

Retelling plan

  • Meet Christopher Robin.
  • Funny bear Winnie the Pooh.
  • Wrong bees.
  • Winnie the Pooh and the rabbit hole.
  • Eeyore's tail.
  • Adventures of friends.

the main idea

Happy is he who has true friends.

What does it teach

The fairy tale teaches friendship, mutual assistance, kindness. Teaches you to develop your own imagination and not be afraid of adventure.

Review

Winnie the Pooh often finds himself in funny situations and sometimes does stupid things, but his pure soul and big loving heart help him get away with it.

Proverbs

  • The fairy tale is beautiful in its structure, and the song is in harmony.
  • One for all and all for one.
  • Don't have a hundred rubles, but have a hundred friends.

What I liked

I really liked that all the forest inhabitants are very friendly and do not leave each other in trouble.

Reader's diary rating

Average rating: 4.6. Total ratings received: 50.