Cemetary Polka and I were talking about Russian and German fairytales and she (lucky girl!) has an awesome app on her iphone for Russian folktales! (JEALOUS!) She brought up this folktale and I wanted to share it with you all!
Masha and the Bear
   
 
 
Masha and the Bear
Once upon a time there lived an old  man and woman who had a granddaughter named Masha. One day some friends  of Masha’s decided to go to the forest to gather mushrooms and berries  and they came to Masha’s house to ask her to go with them.
“Please, Babushka and Dedushka,” said Masha, “do let me go to the forest”
“You may go but see that you keep  close to the others and do not lose sight of them or you might get  lost”, the two old people replied.
Masha and her friends came to the forest and began to hunt for the  mushrooms and berries. From bush to bush, from tree to tree went Masha.  Before she knew it she had strayed away from her friends. When at last  she saw that she was all alone she began to halloo and call to them, but  her friends did not hear her and made no answer. Masha went here and  there, she walked all over the forest, and there before her she saw a  little hut. Masha knocked on the door but there was no answer, so she  gave the door a push and lo! The door opened. Masha went into the hut  and sat down on a bench by the window. “I wonder who lives here she  thought”.  Now in that hut lived a great big Bear, only he  was out walking in the forest just then. It was evening by the time he  came home and when he saw Masha he was very pleased.“Aha”, said he, “now I’ll never  let you go! You will live here in my house as meek as a mouse, and you  will cook my dinner and my breakfast too, and be my servant, faithful  and true.”
Masha grieved and sorrowed for a  long time, but it could not be helped, and so she stayed with the Bear  and kept his house for him. Every day the Bear would go into the forest  for the day and before leaving, he would tell Masha to stay in the hut  and wait for him.
“You must never go out without me, he told her, for if you do I will catch you and eat you up.”So Masha sat thinking of how she  could get away from the Bear. All around was the forest and there was no  one to ask which way to go. She thought and thought until she knew what  to do.
That  day, when the Bear came back from the forest, Masha said to him:“Bear, Bear do let me to my  village for a day. I want to take something good to eat for my Babushka  and Dedushka.”  “No that won’t do at all” said the Bear, “you will get  lost in the forest, but if you give me what it is you want to give your  Grandmother and Grandfather, I will take it myself”.  Now that was all that  Masha wanted to hear. She baked some pies, put them on a platter, and  getting out a very large basket, said to the Bear:
“I’ll put the pies in the basket  and you can take them to my Grandparents. But mind you are not to  open the basket on the way and you are not to eat any of the pies. I am  going to climb to the top of the big oak tree and watch that you do not  open the basket.”  “Very well “, said the Bear, “Give me the basket”.
The Bear went out on the porch to  make sure that it was not raining. When he did, Masha crawled into the  basket and covered herself with the pies. The Bear came in, and there  was the basket all ready to go. So he strapped the basket on his back  and started off. Tramp-tramp went the Bear amid the spruce trees. Clumpity-clump went amid the birch trees, up hill and down dale went his long winding trail, and on and on he walked. At last he got tired and sat down to rest.
“If I don’t rest my bones I think I will die, so I will sit on a stump and I’ll eat a pie”, said the Bear.But Masha called out from the  basket: “I see you, I see you! Don’t sit on the stump And don’t eat my  pie But take it to Babushka And Dedushka, say I”. “Dear me, what sharp  eyes Masha has”, said the Bear, “she sees everything”. He picked up the  basket and went on. He stopped again and said: “If I don’t rest my  bones, I think I will die, so I’ll sit on a stump and eat a pie”. But  Masha called out again from the basket:
“I see you, I see you! Don’t sit on the stump, and don’t eat my pie, but take it to my Bbaushka and Dedushka, as I said “.
“What a clever little girls Masha  is”, said the Bear. “She is sitting high up in a tree and she is far  away, but she sees all I do and she hears all I say”.
He got to his feet and walked on  and on, even faster than before. He came to the village and found the  house where Masha’s grandfather and grandmother lived; he began to bang  away on the gate with all his might.
” KNOCK, KNOCK, open the gate”, he cried, “I have brought something for you from Masha, he cried”.
But the village dogs scented the  Bear and rushed out at him from every yard, yelping and barking. The  Bear was frightened, he set down the basket by the gate and away he ran  as fast as he could without looking back.
The old man and woman came up to the gate and saw the basket.“What is in the basket”, the old woman asked.
The old man lifted the top, and  looked and he could not believe his eyes: there in the basket sat Masha  alive and well. The old man and woman were overjoyed. They kissed and  hugged and embraced Masha and they said she was as clever as clever can  be, as indeed all our readers will surely agree.
 
 
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