The wolf came and the people fell silent. Slavic mythology

WEREWOLVES

Wolf-cloud. In mythological ideas, the image of a wolf was associated with a hostile demon, personifying the power of night darkness, winter, and cold. There was also such folk riddle: “The wolf came, all the people fell silent, the clear falcon came - all the people went,” that is, when the wolf-night comes, people calm down and sleep, and when the clear falcon flies, they wake up from sleep and go to work.

However, the wolf could also be faithful assistant the main character of folk tales. Almost all Indo-European peoples knew the tale of gray wolf, who, with the speed of the wind, carries the prince to distant lands and helps him get the firebird, a golden-maned horse and a beautiful bride. Many fairy tales told about the “winged wolf,” the image of which apparently appeared in those days when man “populated” the sky with animals that personified flying clouds.

Imagining rain clouds as milk cows, sheep, goats, people believed that during the winter these herds were kidnapped by demons, who also ate the divine luminaries - the sun and the moon. The wolf clouds torment with their teeth the sun and the moon and those countless herds of sheep and goats in the form of which the stars were personified. Since the sun, moon and stars are fantasy ancient man recognized as heavenly lights, a belief arose that wolves devour fire. And according to the legend of the Western Slavs, the sun king fights with evil spirits - winter, attacking him in the form of a wolf. Winter, especially December, seemed to be a period of triumph of the demons of cold, fog, and snow clouds over the sun and warmth. That is why the entire winter from November to February was popularly called wolf time. The Slavs called February “fierce” (a characteristic epithet for wolves).

IN folk tales The sun born on Kolyada was imagined as a beautiful baby captured by the evil witch-winter, who turns him into a wolf cub, and only when the wolf's skin is removed from him (that is, when the spring warmth melts the winter clouds) does it acquire its true appearance.

Solar and lunar eclipses were explained by a hostile attack by demons of darkness on the light gods living in the high sky. The cloud wolf, the devourer of heavenly bodies, appeared in Russian folk tales under the name of the self-swallowing wolf. He lives on the ocean-sea (i.e. in the sky), gets the fairy-tale hero a gusli-samoguda (a metaphor for lightning discharges), and has a terrible mouth, ready to swallow the enemy. “Under the wolf-cloud’s tail is a bathhouse, and in the backside is the sea. If you evaporate in this bathhouse and swim in that sea, you will become a handsome young man.” That is, the wolf-cloud keeps in its womb living water rain, with which the concepts of health, strength, and beauty are inseparable.

Some explain the tales of the wolf-cloud folk signs: the howl of wolves foreshadows frost, famine, pestilence, war; if wolves walk through the fields in packs and howl, then this is a sign of future crop failure. The concepts of victory and triumph over enemies were also associated with the brave, predatory wolf. In some mythologies, the image of a wolf was associated with the cult of the leader of the fighting squad (or the god of war) and the ancestor of the tribe. In this regard, common to many European legends is the motif of raising the ancestor of the tribe, and sometimes his twin, as a she-wolf. Such are the legends about Romulus and Remus, the ancient Iranian legend about the she-wolf who suckled Cyrus.

In a stormy thunderstorm, the warlike gods rushed to battle with the demons; after them, greedy wolves ran onto the field and crows flew to devour the corpses of the dead. Winter blizzards and destructive “storms” of the “wolf time” give rise to famine and pestilence. The same sad consequences are caused by human wars that devastate the fields of the farmer; This is why, according to popular belief, the howling of wolves prophesies not only military alarms, but also general impoverishment.

Wolfhounds. In Slavic mythology we also find “wolves” - werewolf people who supposedly have supernatural ability turn into a wolf. It was also believed that such werewolves could turn entire wedding trains into wolves.

In Hittite mythology, the transformation of the groom into a wolf was associated with a common form of marriage - kidnapping the bride. In the ancient Russian tradition, the best man at a wedding was called a wolf by the groom. Mythical heroes in Serbia (Snake - Fire Wolf) were endowed with the ability to turn into a wolf. In “The Tale of Igor’s Campaign” he is called a wolf Old Russian prince Vseslav of Polotsk, which testifies to the pan-Slavic roots of the myth about the wolf hero.

As they say in the beliefs about the transformation of a person into a bear or a wolf, werewolves can be recognized by the fact that their knees of their hind legs are turned forward, like a person’s, and not backward, like an animal’s (wolf). They do not harm people, except those who “spoiled” them. Those should not come into their sight. Sorcerers become werewolves. They pretend to be cats, dogs, roosters. Werewolves are fickle creatures: the sorcerers themselves pretend to be them for a while, and they “turn around” (turn into werewolves) unbaptized babies, girls who took their own lives, etc.

From the book Slavic sorcerers and their retinue author

From the book Werewolves: Wolf People by Karren Bob

From the book Myths of the Finno-Ugrians author Petrukhin Vladimir Yakovlevich

From the book Ukrainka against Ukraine author Bobrov Gleb Leonidovich

Werebears Ideas about this relationship are preserved in tales about werebears. They say that there once lived three sisters. They left people for the forest, turned into bears and fattened there all summer. In winter, they settled in a den. It was here that the hunter discovered the bears.

From the book Magi, sorcerers and ghouls in the religion of the ancient Slavs author Afanasyev Alexander Nikolaevich

From the book Encyclopedia of Slavic culture, writing and mythology author Kononenko Alexey Anatolievich

Sorcerers, witches, ghouls and werewolves. Folk legends place the sorcerer and the witch in very close and undoubted kinship with those mythical creatures, with which fantasy has populated the airy regions since ancient times. But there is also a significant difference between them: all elemental spirits are more

In Slavic fairy tales, the most common animal that acts is the wolf. The meaningfulness of the behavior of a wolf pack, cunning, intelligence and courage gray predators always inspired not only fear, but also respect.
It is not for nothing that in ancient times there was a personal name - Wolf (to this day in the Balkans boys are called Buk, and among the Germans - Wolf). It was believed that wolves do not destroy their victims completely, but choose only those who are doomed to death by Yegor the Brave, the wolf shepherd, that is, the shepherd.

As a matter of fact, this image merged with Yegory the Brave already in later Christian times. Our most ancient ancestors saw in him, first of all, the ruler of the heavenly wolves, who, like hound dogs, participate together with the Wolf Shepherd in wild hunt and rush across the skies.
Descending to the ground, the Wolf Shepherd rides out on a wolf, cracking his whip, driving in front of him wolf packs and threatens them with a baton. Sometimes he approaches villages in the form of a gray-haired old man, but sometimes he turns around wild beast- and then not a single shepherd can protect his flocks from him.
In the forest, he calls the wolves to him and assigns each one his prey. Whoever it is - a sheep, a cow, a pig, a foal or a person - he will not escape his fate, no matter how careful he is, because the Wolf Shepherd is inexorable, like Fate itself.
Proverbs also speak about this: “What the wolf has in its teeth, Yegory gave it,” “The wolf catches the fatal sheep,” “A doomed animal is no longer a animal.”


Lesovichka and Yegory the Wolf Shepherd

That is why davlenina - an animal crushed by a wolf - was never eaten: after all, it was intended for the predator by the Wolf Shepherd himself.
For Belarusians, the Wolf Shepherd is the goat-legged and shaggy Polysun. Legends say that Polisun drives herds of hungry wolves with a whip to feed them to where warring peoples are destroying each other in a fierce war. The blows of this bloody lash spread far across the surrounding countries.
According to folk tales, the wolf is the personification of a dark cloud that stores the living water of rain. The concept of strength, health and beauty is inextricably linked with it, therefore the wolf; sometimes acts as an assistant to the hero of legends. At the same time, the wolf is a cloud obscuring the sun, and in general the embodiment of darkness.
"The wolf came ( dark night) - all the people fell silent; the clear falcon (sun) flew up - all the people went!” - asks an old riddle. There is even such a character from ancient legends - the self-swallowing wolf.

This is a wolf-cloud, a devourer of heavenly bodies. He lives on the sea-ocean (that is, in the sky), his terrible mouth is ready to devour any opponent. Under the wolf’s tail is a bathhouse and the sea: if you evaporate in that bathhouse and swim in that sea, you will find eternal youth and beauty.
According to the word of pagan antiquity, sometimes even Perun himself turned into a wolf when he appeared on earth; sorcerers and witches tried to imitate the god of the Slavic gods.
In one of the most ancient conspiracies, it is said that on the fabulous island of Buyan, “in a hollow clearing, the moon shines on an aspen stump - in a green forest, in a wide valley. A shaggy wolf walks near the stump, all the cattle are on his teeth...”
The tales about Ivan Tsarevich and the gray wolf, repeated not only in Rus', but also among all Slavic and neighboring peoples, even give this predatory beast wings. He flies faster than the wind, carries the gray prince on his back from one side of the white world to the other, helps him get the wonderful Firebird, the golden-maned horse and the beauty of all the beauties - the Tsar Maiden.


Igor Savchenko

This fabulous wolf speaks in a human voice and is gifted with extraordinary wisdom. Why does a wolf - a thief and robber by his bestial nature - help a person in almost all legends and is even ready to sacrifice his life for him? We find here traces of the veneration of the wolf as a totem, a sacred ancestor, and patron of people from his tribe. That is why he is even able to get living and dead water and resurrect a dead hero, although an ordinary beast would not be able to do this.
But over time, the veneration of the ancestor totem and the fear of the fierce beast diverged into different sides. The wolf became more of an enemy than a helper, and people found ways to successfully protect themselves from it - both with the help of weapons and witchcraft.
An old Little Russian belief advises the plowman-cattle breeder to put a piece of iron in the stove - in case the animal strays from the herd and wanders into the forest, then the fierce beast-wolf will never touch it.
From winter Nikola, people say, wolves begin to scour forests, fields and meadows in herds, daring to attack even entire carts. From this day until Epiphany there are wolf holidays. Only after the Epiphany blessing of water does their courage disappear.
According to the stories of coachmen, wolves are afraid of bells and fire. The underbelly bell drives them away from the passerby: “He smells evil spirits that the baptized are coming! - says an experienced person.
In many villages, to protect livestock from wolves, winter time sneaking up to the backyards at night, in the old days it was the custom to run around the outskirts with a bell in hand, wailing to the ringing: “There is an iron tine near the yard, so that through this tine neither a fierce beast, nor a reptile, nor angry man! People who believe in the power of witchcraft say that if you throw a dried wolf's heart towards the wedding train, the newlyweds will live unhappily. In ancient times, wolf fur was considered one of the evil forces in the hands of sorcerers.

WOLF SHEPHERD

One man found a treasure in the forest, under an old stump. I didn’t even have time to rejoice, but the devil was right there: let’s share, they say. They divided and divided until the evening - they still couldn’t come to an agreement. So the cunning devil says:

Let's argue. Whoever sees the first star in the sky will find the treasure.

The man agreed. Of course! He was known in the village as the most far-sighted. He lifted his beard into the sky, looking out for a star. And the devil jumped onto the oak tree, got almost to the top and sat astride a branch, looking around.
“Hey, it’s more convenient for him there,” the man thought and also climbed up.

And then the devil and the man look - a pack of wolves is rushing towards the oak tree, driven by a rider on a white horse. The horseman stopped under a tree and began sending the wolves in different directions. And he punishes everyone how and with what to feed themselves. He sent everyone away and is planning to move on. At that time, a lame wolf trudges along and asks:

Where is my share, Yegory?

“And your share,” the rider answered, “is sitting there on the oak tree.” The wolf waited night and day for the man and the devil to get down from the oak tree, but it never came. He walked away and hid behind a bush. Meanwhile, the devil noticed the first star in the sky, came down from the oak tree, grabbed the treasure - and ran. And the wolf jumped out from behind the bush, overtook the unclean one and immediately ate him. And the treasure was left lying around - what does the wolf need it for?

Only three days later the woodcutters found the man on the oak tree: he still didn’t want to get down. They barely got the poor thing off the tree, gave him something to drink and feed. And then they divided the treasure among everyone.

"Yegory ran into a herd of animals,
To the beastly herd, to the prowling herd...
It was impossible for Yegor to pass,
It was impossible to think.
Saint Yegory says:
- Oh, you goy, you fierce beasts,
Fierce beasts, you prowlers!
Scatter, you animals, all over the earth,
Throughout the Light Russian land,
By steep mountains, on high,
Through dark forests, through dense ones,
You drink behaved, blessed
From Saint Yegori the Brave -
According to God's command,
According to Egoriev's prayer,
Animals scattered all over the earth,
Throughout the Light Russian land,
They drink and eat what they are ordered to do,
Commanded, Blessed"

Egory - wolf shepherd

In a hungry field
Scary and boring.
The wind is cold
The whistle is annoying.

Sneaks around at night
A flock of privet, -
Gray shreds -
The paws are like hooks.

They will sit in the weeds,
They will howl gloomily;
Land in the mound
They dig with their paws.

Shepherd Yegoriy
Sleeps underground.
Bitter grief
Night time...

He rose from the pit,
Brown, shaggy,
Shrugged his shoulders
Rusty armor.

Jumped towards the beast...
Wild pack
Believing the shepherd
It rushes, howling.

A month out of the clouds
He looked with his horns,
Privet Shepherd
He clanked his teeth.

Bitter grief
He's languishing in the field.
Yegory is looking for
What to profit from...

The wanderer is baptized
Standing on the mound,
The rider is rushing
In the black weeds.

A.N. Tolstoy

Slavic mythology and Russian legends.

Russian legends


IN Russian city There is a monument to the Wolf in Tambov, but where is the monument to the She-Wolf?
(In the capital of Italy - Rome, the Capitoline wolf.)

In gratitude, the Romans erected a bronze monument to the she-wolf in the Capitoline Temple. For many centuries the she-wolf stood alone on the pedestal, and in the 15th century AD two more elements were added to the monument. Which ones exactly?
(Sucking babies - Romulus and Remus. According to legend, the founders of Rome, Remus and Romulus, were fed the milk of the Capitoline she-wolf.)

What is another name for the family of mammals of the order of carnivores - wolves?
(Canines, dogs.)

What is another name for a meadow wolf?
(Coyote.)

Is it true that the female wolf is larger than the male?

(No, within the same population, males are always larger than females by about 20%, and with a more forehead.)
Why do wolves howl at the moon?
(Wolves howling at night warn wolves from other packs to leave their territory.)

The fox has a “pipe”, the hare has a “flower”, the hound has a “rut”, the setter has a “feather”. What do wolves call it?
(These are hunting terms in relation to the tail: a wolf has a “log”. Its tail is quite long, thick and, unlike a dog’s, is always down.)

Complete the logical chain: bull - argali, pig - wild boar, duck - mallard, dog - ...?
(Wolf is an animal that has been domesticated.)

What is the name of the new breed of wolf created by crossing certain breeds of dogs and wolves?

(Wolf-dog.)

IN Ancient Greece it was believed that a horse that stepped on the trail of a wolf would no longer be able to... What to do?
(Neigh.)

In Latin this constellation is called "Lupus". What is it called in Russian?
(Wolf.)

By what name do many people know the plant of the Asteraceae family, thistle curly?
(Thistle.)

What is the name of a predatory wasp that preys on bees?
(Bee wolf.)

What is the collective popular name for a number of plants whose fruits are inedible and dangerous?
(Wolfberry. There are plants of the Wolfberry family, including evergreen and deciduous shrubs, originating from Asia, Europe and North Africa. They are famous for their fragrant flowers and poisonous berries.)

Which Russian proverb contains the formula for supreme diplomatic skill?
(And the wolves are fed, and the sheep are safe.)

From which monument of Russian literature of the 12th century are these words: “The prophetic Boyan, if anyone wants to create a song, his thoughts spread across the tree, like a gray fork along the ground, like a crazy eagle under the clouds.”

(“The Tale of Igor’s Campaign.”)

What was the name of the comedy by the Roman comedian Plautus, from which everyone learned that man is a wolf to man?
(“Donkeys.”)

This hero from the fairy tale by Korney Chukovsky was helped on his way to Africa by a whale, eagles and wolves. Name this hero.
(Doctor Aibolit.)

In what Russian fairy tale did a wolf live in the same house with a mouse, a frog, a hare and a fox?
(Fairy tale "Teremok".)

American writer Jack London was a correspondent for Russian-Japanese war, during circumnavigation he was almost eaten by cannibals in the Solomon Islands. What nickname did the Alaska Indians give him?
(Wolf. Jack London signed his letters this way.)

This Canadian writer and animal artist did not sign some of his letters, but drew the footprint of a wolf, because his Indian friends gave him the name Black Wolf. By the way, the wolf is one of this writer’s favorite heroes. Name the writer and the name of at least one such wolf in his work.
(Seton-Thompson, Lobo the Wolf.)

In this “Law” of Kipling there are 16 main “articles” regulating the rules of conduct, two preliminary and one final “article” regulating the operation of the “Law” and the punishment for its violation. Who is it written for?
(For wolves. It's about about Kipling's poem "The Law of the Jungle".)

What was the nickname of the she-wolf who sheltered Mowgli in Kipling's book?
(Raksha.)

In what inhuman way did the poet Vladimir Mayakovsky propose to fight bureaucracy?
(“Gnaw out like a wolf.” “I would gnaw out bureaucracy like a wolf...” - a line from “Poems about the Soviet Passport.”)

It is said that Vladimir Ilyich Lenin, influenced by the wolf hunt scene from Leo Tolstoy's classic War and Peace, uttered a phrase that became a catchphrase. Name three last words this phrase.
(What a seasoned little man!)

In ancient times, the Slavs believed that wild animals were their ancestors: each tribe had its own totem - a sacred animal that they worshiped. Name the tribe that considered the wolf their ancestor.
(Lyutici. One of the names of the wolf is “fierce.”)

What was the name of one of Hitler's bunkers?
(“Wolf’s Lair” – “Wolfenstein.”)

How modern Russian singer sings a song about a boy growing up in a wolf pack?
(Alexander Marshall, song “Little Wolf”.)

From the mouth of which movie character in the cult film “The Meeting Place Cannot Be Changed” the phrase “Wolves are disgraceful” came to the general public?
(Blotter.)

Name the film that won an Oscar in 1990?
(“Dances with Wolves.”)

What do you call both a lone wolf and an unsociable, gloomy person?
(Biryuk.)

This is what bikers call themselves. How?
(Night wolves.)

When the ore of this metal entered the furnace along with tin ores, foam formed, carrying a lot of tin into the slag. Medieval metallurgists said that this substance eats tin. What animal did they compare him to?
(With a wolf. The name of this metal comes from two German words “wolf” and “foam”; this is tungsten.)

Guess the Slavic riddle: “The wolf came - all the people fell silent; the clear falcon flew up - all the people went!”
(Night and sun.)

Guess the Syrian riddle: Three friendly wolves: one lies and does not rise, the second never gets enough, the third flies upward. Who are they?
(Ashes, fire and smoke.)

There is a well-known type of wolf hunting called “wabu”. A special hunter-cabbler performs a certain action, having completed which, he runs 50 paces downwind and hides. What does a jacker do?
(Howls like a wolf.)

What is the collective name for large dogs that were raised and used to protect pastures from wolves or to hunt them?
(Wolfhounds.)

In what famous logical problem is there a wolf present?
(Problem about the wolf, cabbage and goat.)

What is a wolf's mouth called?
(Mouth.)

What is a wolf smile called?
(Grin.)

The painting “Ivan Tsarevich on the Gray Wolf” belongs to which great Russian artist?
(Viktor Vasnetsov. This famous artist preferred to work from life. To create this painting, this large predator was specially delivered to him.)

Name a fox, wolf or sable cub in one word.
(Puppy.)

What is another name for a children's toy spinning top?
(Top. According to one of our cartoons, a wolf, trying to eat its tail out of hunger, turned into this toy.)

Heraldry experts distinguish the heraldic figure “dog” and the heraldic figure “wolf”. By what detail do experts distinguish these two figures?
(Collar.)

How is the German name Rudolph translated into Russian? And Adolf?
(Red Wolf, Noble Wolf.)

This predator drags its prey and eats it in a secluded place. This is where its name came from. Who is this?
(Wolf.)

Which god of ancient Egyptian mythology was depicted as a wolf, a jackal, or a man with the head of a jackal?

(Anubis is the patron of the dead, as well as necropolises and funeral rites.)

What does the medieval expression “hold the wolf by the ears” mean?
(Be in a difficult position.)

Which catchphrase used when talking about lawlessness based on brute force?

(Wolf law.)

As in Tsarist Russia called a document marked as politically unreliable?

(Wolf passport or wolf ticket.)

What do we call a person who hides evil actions under the guise of virtue?

(A wolf in sheep's clothing.)

Lithuanians say: “When you run from a wolf, you run to a bear.” What are we saying?
(Fall from the fire and into the fire.)

In England they say: “He who is afraid of every bush should never go bird-hunting,” in Germany: “He who loves to lick honey should not be afraid of bees.” What are we saying in this case?
(If you are afraid of wolves, do not go into the forest.)

In Sergei Prokofiev's symphonic fairy tale “Peter and the Wolf,” the oboe represents the Duck, and the clarinet represents the Cat. And the pipe, like some other copper wind instruments, - exactly him. Whom?
(Wolf.)

Once upon a time, a wolf “posed” for the great Russian sculptor Pyotr Klodt. What was the master working on?

(Above the monument to I. Krylov in the Summer Garden.)

In which fairy tale by Sergei Mikhalkov, The Wolf, is the right of children to live peacefully in their homes and feel calm?
(“The Three Little Pigs.” The wolf destroyed the houses of two piglets and threatened to destroy the third.)

What was the name of the series of Soviet cartoons in which the wolf always chased the hare?
(“Well, just wait!”)

This Colonel General in 1988-1991. was the head of the Institute military history Ministry of Defense of the USSR. Who is he?
(Dmitry Volkogonov.)

In July 1984, this pilot-cosmonaut made a flight on the Soyuz T-12 spacecraft together with Vladimir Dzhanibekov and Svetlana Savitskaya. Name it.
(Igor Volk.)

"The wolf came - all the people fell silent" (riddle)

Alternative descriptions

Dark time of day

Times of Day

Time of day between evening and morning

Poem by M. Lermontov

Story by I. Bunin

. "We drank all..., walked all... until the morning"

. "The wolf came and the people fell silent"

. "The queen gave birth to... either a son or a daughter"

. "Dark..." (Soviet song)

. "Quiet Ukrainian..."

. "A thousand and one..."

Actress Lyubov Orlova made her debut in the film “Petersburgskaya...”

Time of vampires and sleepwalkers

Time for the wolf hunt

Time for a Morpheus hug

Time of owls and eagle owls

Times of Day

The time when all cats are gray

The time when the owl does not sleep

The time when sleepwalkers walk

Disc of the group "Kino" 1986

G. night church. the time when the sun is below the cover (horizon), opposite sex. day. When the earth turns, one side of it looks towards the sun, the other towards the shade; therefore, for each point on earth, there is its own night, both in terms of onset and duration: under the equinox (equator), night and day are equal, 12 hours each; at the very ends of the earth's axis (poles), half a year is night and half a year is day; at all intermediate points, the length of day and night varies according to the seasons. Day and night, and a day away (so off we go!). What do you know, born in the night! comic. Night, midnight, north. The Siberian rivers flowed for the night; opposite sex noon, south. Darkness, darkness, darkness, darkness, darkness, gloom. It’s night in the closet, you can’t see it without a candle. in our forest night and night. *Ignorance, ignorance of truths and goodness; spiritual darkness. These people, with their minds and hearts, live in the night. Dead of night; midnight, full night, between dusk and dawn. Night, at least poke your eyes out. It’s night outside, it’s already getting dark. Nightly, nightly, every night. Day-to-day, night-to-night, around the clock, continuously, always. To spend the day, while away the night, spend. Work at night or at night, under fire. The spinners from Pokrov sit up at night. Live day and night, loudly, wildly. He wanders around at night, sleepwalking. I’m not even at night, there’s no sleep, or everyone’s on their feet. Over the night, over the year, you don’t know what will happen. I can’t sleep during the day, I can’t eat at night! a joke on the supposedly sick person. Night uterus everything is smooth! nights, what's in the bag. An overnight stay will cover everything. Night after night you can’t get off the hummock, the coachmen say. The deaf night swallows a lot of tears. The night turned out to be stormy and stormy. The day is in sin, and the night is in sleep. Good night, sleep until midnight with your eyes wide open! Night in a dream, day in evil. There will be day, there will be night (and vice versa). Know by sight what walks at night. At night, the fox mouses and hunts. The day fades into night, and man becomes sad. The night is dark forever. Where there is night, there comes sleep. The day grumbles, the night screams. I feel where I sleep, but I don’t know where I sleep. Night will come, so let's say what the day was like. The night is dark, the day is not clear, it doesn’t matter. It won’t be until nightfall that it will be mentioned (about the evil, about the terrible). don't remember the devils at night. Good night is not a loss. We don’t get enough sleep at night, we don’t finish a bite. Dark is the night tattoo birth mother. It's a dark night, dear mother. Get moving, work, the night will be shorter! The poor man has to marry and the night is short. Anyone who gets married can't sleep at night. As we get married, the night is short. At night all roads are smooth. At night you can’t see whether it’s cold or warm. God's night is dark, human deeds are dark. The night is sometimes dark, the horse is sometimes black: I’m riding, riding, and I’ll feel: is she there? We talk about people for hours, and people spend nights talking about us. Neither during the day, nor at night, neither in the morning, nor in the evening, nor in everyday life (never). If you throw dirty linen outside the hut at night, the cattle will dry out. The brownie (posen, posten) strangles him at night, sitting on his chest. The brownie knocks and fusses at night, surviving the owner. Plow up the hut at night so that the angels can walk around cleanly. If chickens fly off the net at night, then there will be trouble. It won’t knock, it won’t make any noise, but it will fit at an angle? night. Night or day, Parietaria plant; wall, dodder bells. Unusual care, without intermittent, without shortness of breath. I prayed for you all night. Night darkness. Night time, peace. Night watchman. Night luminary, moon. Night life, at night, in the night. The night arc was shining, its path was covered by ours, the night one. Night alarm. Night beauty, spirit, Orchis, white, fragrant. Night noun Wed thief. night grazing of horses. Who needs it at night? now in the night. Night adv. at night, sometimes at night. Night-night, night-night, every night, nightly; all night long. Stay all night at work. Night dream, fire, former night, last night, about last night. It's funny, amusing, talking about nightly things! A night light may be a lamp, a small lamp, or a candlestick of various types with a candle, lit at night; artil. a brass box in which to hold a burning wick; nocturnal bird in general, owl, nightjar, etc.; night moth; night watchman; night cab driver; night thief; in general, a person who works at night or lives at night; sometimes a parachute, etc.; a night stall or stable, enclosure for a horse. Nochnitsa bat, leather, bat; nightjar bird, Caprimulgus; woman for night care of the sick, nurse. Tver pronunciation night sleep, insomnia. Night light, related to a night light. Nochnina spending the night and guarding in the field, for example. shepherds; night. Nochnyanka w. night light, meaning night moth, butterfly. Spend the night, spend the night where, sleep when it’s night. Where did you spend the night? “Under the hat”), i.e. on the road, on your feet. To spend the night does not last forever. Where the night spends the night, the year grows (rozinya). Nowadays the people are worse than last year: they came in the evening and came out in the morning and they will say that they spent the night! No tea, no matter where the hour is, God will bring you to spend the night. whoever was there spent the night with us. The guest who gets up early wants to spend the night. Stay the night, you'll have dinner tomorrow: the cow will calve, and you'll have some milk! Matchmaker, here's your hat and mittens, sleep over, darling! “No, matchmaker, I’ll drink all night, not spend the night!” How did you sleep and spend the night? We didn’t get there, we spent the night. We'll spend the night, it's better to go during the day. How did you spend the night? Overnight Wed. duration overnight m. overnight w. about. valid and comp. according to verb. Overnight, -vka, overnight Wed. lodging for the night, a place where someone spends the night, in a field, in a forest, in a city, a yard or a house where someone began to spend the night; shelter for the night. A traveler does not carry overnight shelter with him. Nochnina, overnight, overnight stay; overnight stay outside your home: go to an overnight stay, sleep. Departure or departure to somewhere, for overnight fishing, sib. overnight and overnight. Let's go for the night and get some crayfish. Guys in the night, Kaluga. at night pasture, with horses. Overnighter m. -shchia f. lodging house m. -nitsa f. stopped somewhere for the night, stopped somewhere to spend the night, for the night; often pronunciation heir, vyat. commander An overnighter, an overnight stayer, someone who goes where to spend the night; night light, who staggers, walks at night. Overnight, related to overnight stay. Nochlezhnoe Wed. payment for overnight stay, heating. To spend the night, to spend the night, to be somewhere for the night, on the road, in fishing, etc. To spend the night, to engage in night fishing, especially about overnight cab drivers. Spend the night arch. about the bride: thank the father and mother for grooming them early in the morning before the wedding

Cantata by Lithuanian composer V. Laurusas "Burning..."

Carnival time of day

Lyric song by Viktor Tsoi

Favorite time for vampires

Mayskaya at Gogol's

Between evening and morning

Opera by Russian composer A. N. Serov "May..."

Opera by Russian composer Rimsky-Korsakov "May..."

Opera by Turkmen composer A. Agadzhikov "Anxious..."

Opera by Ukrainian composer K. F. Dankevich "Tragedy..."

Opera by Ukrainian composer N. V. Lysenko "Christmas..."

Operetta by the Austrian composer Johann Strauss "... in Venice"

From sunset to sunrise

From Dusk Till Dawn (not Tarantino)

Leonid Utesov's song "Dark..."

The story of the Russian fabulist I. Krylov

The story of the Russian writer V. M. Kozhevnikov “White...”

Poem by the Russian poet S. I. Kirsanov "... for the New Century"

The threshold of the morning

A work by the Russian writer I. Bunin from the collection "Falling Leaves"

Working hours of robbers

Hitler's reprisal against the SA stormtroopers who were preparing the putsch was called "... long knives"

A story by Russian writer V. Garshin

A story by the Russian writer I. Bunin

The novel by the American writer Francis Fitzgerald "... is tender"

The darkest time of the day

Quiet time of day

Poem by the 19th century Russian poet I. Nikitin

Poem by Russian poet V. Zhukovsky

Dark part of the day

Film "Carnival..."

Film by A. A. Rowe "May..., or the Drowned Woman"

Alexander Gordon's film "The Last... in Paradise"

Boris Barnet's film "... in September"

Film by Viktor Turov "Sunday..."

Chris Columbus' film "... with Beth Cooper"

Film by Leonid Lukov "... over Belgrade"

Shawn Levy's film "...at the Museum"

Jan Fried's film "The Twelfth..."

Part of the day

. "The wolf came and the people fell silent"

Actress Lyubov Orlova made her debut in the film “Petersburgskaya...”

Antonym of day

IN Greek mythology earthly darkness, one of the primary deities that emerged from chaos at the beginning of creation (mythical)

Vampire hunting time

Walpurgis...

Time calculation

Story by I. Bunin

The most active time for woodcock

The sexiest time of the day

Mayakovsky's verse

Pushkin's verse

Poem by Kuchelbecker

Poem by M. Lermontov

Disc of the group "Kino" 1986

Time of vampires and ghouls

Shawn Levy's film "...at the Museum"

Chris Columbus' film "... with Beth Cooper"

Hitler’s reprisal against the SA stormtroopers who were preparing the putsch was called “... long knives”

Erich Maria Remarque's novel "... in Lisbon"

. "Ukrainian quiet..."

The novel by American writer Francis Fitzgerald “... is tender”

Leonid Utesov's song “Dark...”

Alexander Gordon's film "The Last... in Paradise"

Time of day for dark affairs

Film by A. A. Rowe “Mayskaya..., or the Drowned Woman”

Film by Jan Fried "The Twelfth..."

Film by Leonid Lukov “... over Belgrade”

Film by Viktor Turov “Sunday...”

Opera by Turkmen composer A. Agadzhikov “Alarming...”

Opera by Ukrainian composer K. F. Dankevich “Tragedy...”

Cantata by Lithuanian composer V. Laurusas “Burning...”

Opera by Russian composer A. N. Serov “Mayskaya...”

Opera by Ukrainian composer N. V. Lysenko “Christmas...”

The story of the Russian writer V. M. Kozhevnikov “White...”

Poem by the Russian poet S. I. Kirsanov “... for the New Century”

Boris Barnet's film "... in September"

. “The wolf came - all the people fell silent” (riddle)

Time of day when all cats are gray

What was Nikta the goddess of?

. “Whoever gets married, he... can’t sleep” (last)

. “The bird waved its wing and covered the light with one feather” (riddle)

Operetta by the Austrian composer Johann Strauss “... in Venice”

Opera by Russian composer Rimsky-Korsakov “Mayskaya...”

Gogol's novel "Mayskaya..., or the Drowned Woman"

Gogol's story "... before Christmas"

From dusk to dawn

Carnival...

Film "Carnival..."

Shakespeare's comedy "The Twelfth..."

Ghosts' Finest Hour

Barfolomeevskaya...

. "a thousand and one..."

A work by the Russian writer I. Bunin from the collection “Falling Leaves”

Poem by B. Pasternak

Poem by A. Blok

Poem by Mayakovsky

Poem by Pushkin

The time when the owl does not sleep

. “...tender”, Valeria

. “the queen gave birth to... either a son or a daughter”

Owl hunting time

Time of day when “all cats are gray”

. “The wolf came and the people fell silent”

. “he exchanged us for a woman, only... he saw her off, and the next morning he became a woman”

. “We drank all..., walked all... until the morning”

. “dark...” (Soviet song)

Vampires' favorite time of day

Time is not for larks, but for owls