Childhood rarely presents an opportunity for a problem. An essay based on Granin's text about childhood

D.A. Granin is one of the amazing masters artistic word. His works instill in us a reverent attitude towards childhood.

The author invites you to reflect on important issue: the value of childhood in a person’s life. In the text proposed for analysis, D.A. Granin recalls childhood as one of the best stages of his life: “Childhood was the most happy times life."

I completely share the author's position. Each of us has tender moments of childhood that have had an impact on us big influence, shaped our worldview and firmly settled in our memory and which our hearts carefully preserve. I'll bring you literary examples, confirming my opinion. Firstly, the work of Antoine de Saint-Exupery " A little prince". Main character He is still very young, he is just beginning to comprehend life, to separate good from evil, to look for the beautiful in a fragile world. There is something that the Little Prince, due to his age, cannot understand - this is death. This is not the end, continued below.

Useful material on the topic

  • to the text by D. Granin “1) Childhood rarely provides the opportunity to guess anything about the child’s future”

But the hero sees life and is not afraid to take risks - perhaps this is the most important charm of childhood. Secondly, I.A. Goncharov’s novel “Oblomov”. In the chapter “Oblomov’s Dream,” the main character recalls his childhood, that carefree time that had a great influence on the development of the hero as a person. These memories fill Ilya Ilyich’s heart with trembling.

Reading the text helped me confirm the opinion that childhood is the most carefree and carefree, but very necessary and important time for a person. Childhood opened up new horizons for each of us and gave us memories that will warm a person even on the coldest days.

Option 2

Childhood is a wonderful time in the life of every person. This is a wonderful and carefree time, the beginning life path. That is why, when we become adults, we remember only the best things about our childhood.

The problem of the value of childhood memories is raised in the text by D. Granin. The author shares his childhood memories, calling childhood the kingdom of freedom. “There were so many different happy, cheerful things...” he exclaims.

I completely share the author's opinion. In my opinion, childhood memories are truly wonderful: basically, as we grow up, we remember our childhood more and more. Everything bad is completely forgotten, only the charm of a child’s life remains. The topic of childhood memories is often touched upon in literature. One of the most famous works, dedicated to childhood memories, is Ray Bradbury's autobiographical novel Dandelion Wine. The author tells about the holidays of a 12-year-old boy, about his summer adventures and impressions. The book very vividly describes that very atmosphere of childhood, filled with joy and a feeling of delight.

Russian writers also addressed the topic of childhood. The most famous poem, dedicated to childhood memories, is Surikov’s “childhood”. In it, the author recalls sledding with village boys. In the main character, many readers recognize themselves as children. The poem is imbued with carelessness and childish gaiety.

Thus, childhood is the happiest period of life, so we should value and cherish childhood memories.

Option 3

Childhood is happy time in the life of every person. Childhood years are full of adventure, kindness and purity of soul. In the text proposed for analysis, D.A. Granin raises precisely the problem of the value of childhood memories in a person’s life.

The author reveals the problem by reflecting on childhood as a happy time in his life. Nothing worried him then, “there was no sense of duty, there were no responsibilities.” He thanks fate for a good childhood and says that at that time the full value of childhood years was not yet realized.

I cannot but agree with D.A. Granin. Indeed, every person had a carefree, happy childhood. This is the time when a person enjoys the simplest things.

Reflecting on this problem, I remember autobiographical trilogy Maxim Gorky. In the story “In People,” Alyosha Peshkov, working on a ship as a tableware worker, recalls his early childhood, mother, grandmother, who taught him only good things. In the house of grandfather Kashirin, where no one was loved or pitied, grandmother was the only person who cared for little Alyosha and loved him.

Of course, we also remember the trilogy of Leo Tolstoy. In the story “Childhood” Nikolenka Irtenyev enjoys the memories of her happy childhood. He talks about how his mother took care of him. The touch of his mother's hands and voice make him feel endless love for her.

Thus, childhood leaves a certain mark on the soul of every person. Growing up, a person understands the value of childhood and remembers his carefree childhood, being the main thing for everyone, with a smile on his face.

Option 4

In the center of our attention is the text of the Russian Soviet writer Daniil Aleksandrovich Granin, which describes moral problem cowardice and cowardice hiding behind good intentions.

I completely agree with the author’s opinion, because indeed, time flies very quickly, and you simply cannot think one-sidedly: you can miss the last opportunity to meet face to face with your invented fear. Perhaps it is completely unjustified and they are waiting for your first step and have no idea what guides you when doing or not doing certain actions. So the main character realized his mistake too late, which can now never be corrected...

The relevance of this problem is shown by a strong, emotional poem by Alexander Trifonovich Tvardovsky, which contains the lines:

"I know, it's not my fault

The fact that others did not come from the war,

The fact that some are older, some are younger -

We stayed there, and it’s not about the same thing,

That I could, but failed to save them

This is not about that, but still, still, still...”

I think that these words are very close to Daniil Granits, whose conscience did not allow him to meet the mother of his deceased comrade. The feeling of guilt for not being taken into account barricaded his mind.

And in the work of Konstantin Georgievich Paustovsky “Telegram” main character Nastya, in the bustle of the city and eternal troubles, grew cold and did not pay any attention to her mother. Even to the telegram informing about the woman’s illness, she did not immediately respond. Unfortunately, the girl was late with her intention to visit her old mother: Katerina Ivanovna died. All this happened because of the same false shame. After all, everything could have been fixed by taking a step towards meeting your fear a little earlier.

People tend to make mistakes, be afraid and be ashamed. Often we simply don’t know whether to do this or that action. The cycle of thoughts leads first to one answer, then to another, and time, capturing us in the arms of its whirlwind, independently makes a decision for us. The transience of time is what we really should be afraid of. Thus, you need to step over all your beliefs at least once so as not to lose contact with your loved one once and for all.

Option 5

What is childhood, what place does it occupy in a person’s life? - these are the questions the author encourages us to ponder.

Granin raises the ever-present problem of the value of childhood memories in a person’s life. After all, one of the greatest successes in a person’s life is the memories of happy childhood, which largely affect our future. Danil Aleksandrovich discusses what we most often remember in adult life, tries to find answers to his questions and justifications for actions (21).

The author's position is expressed quite clearly. He describes his childhood with admiration, from which his satisfaction with it follows. According to Granin, childhood is the main age of a person, main part life. So it is, in the life of each of us it occupies a special place. With age, we appreciate it more and remember it more often. Childhood is the time of life, during which we are not responsible for anything (10), and we fully feel free (19).

For me, childhood memories are the most pleasant. I always remember all the good things. I think about my childhood with the sea positive emotions, it seems fabulous to me. Due to my small age, I think that childhood best time, to which you always want to return, to relive wonderful moments. In my opinion, my good childhood We owe it to our parents, grandparents, because they are the “creators” of our childhood memories.

Everyone's childhood memories are different: some are happy, some are sad. In L.N. Tolstoy’s work “Childhood,” the main character Nikolenka suffered a lot of misfortune. At the age of ten, he had to endure the bitterness of love, separation and the most the worst thing is death mother. It was from the moment last event his childhood ended. Yes, this is an example not with the most best memories, which will leave a deep, heavy, sad mark in the boy’s memory, but unfortunately this often happens.

The author, describing his childhood, allowed me to remember moments of my own, to think about the questions asked in the text, and the importance of the problem posed by him. This text left a pleasant impression. I would like every person to experience happiness when remembering their childhood. And ask parents to try to make their children’s childhood an unforgettable time in their lives.

Option 6

Childhood... A person can never forget that beautiful time when he lived without worries, any troubles, some problems, misfortunes, when he was glad that the most dear and beloved people were next to him - mom and dad. Yes, undoubtedly, childhood is a happy time in everyone’s life. It is impossible to imagine life without her.

The author of the text touches on the problem of the role of childhood in a person’s destiny. To draw attention to this issue, D.A. Granin talks about a happy time in life. He gives some facts. The author of the text writes about a carefree, wonderful time. In childhood, the world is perceived differently than in adulthood. The environment appears in bright colors, the most ordinary things seem fantastic. For example, childhood food is special. During this period, a life appears whose happiness lies in the fact that you exist in this world.

The author's position is extremely clear and understandable. The author claims that childhood is a carefree, happy time in life. He believes that the main age of a person is childhood. The child is truly happy at this time, since the person lives without worries and enjoys the most basic things.

In the world fiction There are many examples proving the role of childhood in the fate of an individual. For example, L.N. Tolstoy’s work “Childhood” vividly conveys that special, unforgettable note of true happiness. The main character talks about his childhood, about how he ran around with friends, playing hunters. At the end of the story, he asks a question that, in principle, does not require an answer: “What time can there be? better than that, when the two best virtues - innocent gaiety and the boundless need for love - were the only motives in life?

In L.N. Tolstoy’s novel “War and Peace,” the heroine Natasha Rostova lived a carefree, happy life as a child. She was not surrounded by any problems. All this appeared in her destiny later.

So, it is undeniable that the role of childhood in a person’s life is colossal. Rejoicing in the most basic things, being in joy and love is true happiness. Childhood is the main and significant period in life.

Option 7

When we were little, we all dreamed of growing up as quickly as possible, becoming independent and independent. But later, many realized the error of their desires and wanted to return back to a distant, happy and carefree time. What is the value of childhood and what role does it play in a person’s life? This is the problem that D.A. Granin thinks about in the proposed text.

The author recalls with joy in his heart his happiest time in life. The writer calls childhood “the kingdom of freedom”, because then there was no duty, responsibility, responsibilities, but there was only a great desire to study everything unknown. Of course, with age many things are forgotten, but the “charm of that life” remains in everyone’s memory forever.

Even man himself is born and destined specifically for childhood.

Many writers and poets addressed this problem in their works. In particular, let us remember A.I. Goncharov’s novel “Oblomov”. How sweet for the hero is the memory of childhood, where worries and troubles fall on the shoulders of the parents, and the child has unlimited freedom, vigor and energy. Adult life completely changes the hero. He becomes a lazy, uninteresting person who, until the end of his days, dreams of returning to childhood.

Let us turn to L.N. Tolstoy’s epic novel “War and Peace.” The beauty of Natasha Rostova is that she was able to take out energy, playfulness, and curiosity from childhood and preserve them throughout her life. And therefore, the heroine had happy not only her childhood years surrounded by Sonya and Boris, but also the years of her formation as a person.

After reading the text, I come to the following conclusion: childhood, without a doubt, plays important role in the development of a person as an individual and is the best moment in life.

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Updated: 2017-03-04

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Childhood is one of the most magical and memorable periods in the lives of most people. In the text by D.A. Granin, Russian writer, public figure, the problem of the value of childhood is raised.

Revealing this problem, the author writes that “childhood is an independent kingdom, a separate country, independent of the adult future.” YES. Granin notes that during this period it seems as if the whole world was arranged for you, because then there are still no responsibilities or a sense of duty. The writer draws our attention to the fact that in childhood lyrical hero could do whatever his heart desired: run to God knows where, lie in a field, fly with the clouds, “float away” to the country of Fenimore Cooper or Jack London. The author makes it clear to the reader that childhood is a time of freedom.

According to D.A. Granin, “childhood remains the main thing and only gets prettier over the years.” The author writes that in childhood there was no understanding of the value of love and friendship, no fame, no travel, there was only real life. The author notes that “childhood is black bread,” which later did not exist. Russian Soviet writer draws our attention to the fact that food from childhood always disappears somewhere. YES. Granin conveys to the reader the idea that there was something incredible and magical in childhood, which over time remains only in memories for many adults.

To prove my point, I will cite as an example the novel by I.A. Goncharov "Oblomov". The main character I.I. Oblomov dreams of his homeland - the village of Oblomovka. It was there that he spent his carefree childhood, in which there was neither fussiness nor vigorous activity. Little Oblomov had no responsibilities - nannies and servants did everything for him. Ilya Ilyich forgot that at first he was a very playful child, but due to the strictest supervision and frequent prohibitions, he became accustomed to a slow and calmly flowing life. I.I. Oblomov grew up as a dreamer, and in his dreams he sees his native Oblomovka, where he grew up, as an earthly paradise.

Over time, bad things are forgotten, children perceive life differently than adults. I will give an example from foreign literature.

As a second example to prove my point, I will give philosophical tale Antoine de Saint-Exupery "The Little Prince". Famous French writer praises childhood and writes that children are able to see the miraculous in the ordinary. For example, adults cannot see a lamb through the walls of a box; only children are capable of this. Only the child sees the boa constrictor in the drawing from the outside and inside, and not the hat. Unfortunately, very often this skill disappears with age. The author conveys to the reader that childhood is a time of inner freedom.

Thus, childhood is real life, a wonderful time of freedom.

Based on Granin's text. Childhood rarely provides an opportunity to guess anything about a child’s future. No matter how they try...

What is the value of childhood? Why do we most often remember our childhood as we get older? How is it different from the rest of life? These and other questions arise in my mind after reading Daniil Granin’s text.

In his text, the author raises the problem of the value of childhood. The writer is sure that childhood is “an independent kingdom, a separate country, independent of the adult future.” According to the author, this is a “happy time” because “the world seemed to me to be arranged for me, I was a joy for my father and mother, there was still no sense of duty, no responsibilities.” Moreover, this is the “kingdom of freedom,” not only external, but also internal. “I lived among grass, berries, geese, ants.” Daniil Granin sums it up: “Childhood remains the main thing and gets prettier over the years.” Because it is real life, “a pure feeling of delight at one’s existence under this sky.” The problem that the author raises made me think deeply about the value of my childhood.

I agree with the opinion of the author. We remember our childhood because it was then that we were free, happy, and experienced real delight, surprise, and joy. As a child, we feel like the center of the universe and it seems to us that everything in this world is for us and for our sake. We are sincere, pure, naive. Of course, in childhood we are also unhappy, but all this remains in the past, the “charm” of that life comes to the fore. I will try to prove this by turning to fiction.

Volodya, the main character of Valentin Rasputin’s story “French Lessons,” had a difficult childhood. Post-war childhood, hungry. To study, the boy lives with a distant relative. Her son steals food that his mother gives to the boy. Volodya began to play for money, but he only wins a ruble to buy a large mug of milk, as the doctor advised. The writer writes about himself, about his difficult childhood. Of course, he remembers the bruises when the guys beat him, he remembers how difficult it was for him away from home. But these are not the main memories. He remembers the teacher French Lidia Mikhailovna, the class teacher, who treated him like a mother. She invited him home to improve his French, but how she wanted to feed him. Volodya was too proud and never touched anything. Then she decided to play with the boy for money so that he would have the opportunity to win money for milk. It didn't end well. The young teacher was fired from the school. But her kindness, her genuine desire to help him at the most difficult moment of his life, parcels with hematogen and apples will be remembered by him for the rest of his life as the most vivid and special memories. And home French lessons will become lessons of kindness and humanity for life.

But Natasha Rostova from Leo Tolstoy’s epic novel “War and Peace” had a carefree and happy childhood. This is truly a “separate country”, a “happy time”. Let's remember Natasha's birthday. She is in love with Boris, she so wants everyone to feel good, just as she worries about Sonya and her brother Nikolai. They keep secrets and play pranks. Natasha can do anything, because she is sure that everyone loves her, and she loves everyone. How sincerely she admires nature, her soul strives for music, how she rejoices at every little thing. “The pure feeling of delight at one’s existence under this sky.”

Thus, childhood is truly the most important time of life. This is a country independent of the adult future. A country where you are happy, carefree, open to the whole world and expect only joy and miracles from it. That’s why we value childhood so much, and over the years it becomes more and more valuable to us. Appreciate your childhood and remember it often.

The problem of perceiving childhood as a happy time. Based on Granin's text. Childhood rarely provides an opportunity to guess anything about a child’s future. No matter how they try...

Is childhood always a happy time in a person’s life? Aren't we unhappy as children? Why do we remember childhood with special warmth and tenderness? These and other questions arise in my mind after reading Daniil Granin’s text.

In his text, the author poses the problem of perceiving childhood as a happy time. He is sure that for every person childhood is “the main part of life.” This is “an independent kingdom, a separate country, independent from the adult future, from parenting plans" The writer is convinced that this is “the happiest time of life,” because it seems to us that the whole world is arranged only for us, because there is still no sense of duty or responsibilities. “I lived among grass, berries, geese, ants.” Childhood is “the kingdom of freedom, not only external, but also internal.” “There was no love, no fame, no travel - only life, a pure feeling of delight at one’s existence under this sky.” The problem that the author raises made me think deeply about my perception of childhood as a happy time.

I completely share the author's position. All bright discoveries, impressions, experiences are from childhood. My favorite landscape, which took my breath away, and it was such a pity that I was not an artist or a poet to capture the moment. Large magical strawberries with a unique aroma, which I picked every summer near the lake with my parents. And I tried to collect the most. And the taste of ice cream from childhood. So many things will never happen again. Only in memories can you relive all this again, becoming a happy, carefree, naive girl. That’s why we remember our childhood so often, even in joyless moments, I believe we also find our charm. I will try to prove this by turning to fiction.

The main character of I. A. Goncharov’s novel “Oblomov,” Ilya Ilyich Oblomov, remembers his childhood in a dream. He dreams about him home village Oblomovka, where he grew up. Endless open spaces, forests, fields. A measured life, where, after working hard, everyone fell asleep in the afternoon. Where they held feasts and loved to eat delicious food. Where they didn’t close their houses and weren’t afraid that something would happen. Nothing special happened. Everything was calm and predictable. The boy was surrounded by the care and love of his parents and nannies, who foresaw all his desires and worried about him. In this life there was no need to run somewhere, negotiate something, or do something. Everything was arranged in such a way that it seemed to the boy that it would always be this way and that it should be so. As an adult, he often recalled Oblomovka and his childhood as a happy time of his life.

The main character of N.V. Gogol’s novel “Dead Souls” also recalls a childhood that can hardly be called happy. His mother died early, and his father often punished him. But all his life he remembered his father’s advice: please teachers, be friends only with the rich, try not to give anything to anyone, but make sure that they give it to you. Top tip: Pavlush will remember saving a penny for the rest of his life, and will diligently bring it to life. Already as a child, he tried to follow his father’s orders and subordinated his life to them. His childhood can hardly be called free and carefree. But for him, these memories are the happiest time of his life, when all his plans were fulfilled, and his thoughts pictured a rich, carefree life. future life.

Thus, childhood for everyone is a happy time in life, where we are filled with confidence in happiness, the fulfillment of all our desires, and the belief that this whole world was created for us. Love your childhood. Remember it often, especially when it’s difficult. These memories will help you feel strong, carefree, happy again...

It's your fault. You set an example.

After this outburst, D. began to worry that his mother would lose her temper and leave.

wander through the courtyards with the singers.

Why, why did you give your word,

When you can't love.

You probably didn't know about it

That I could ruin myself.

She sang with such feeling that D. believed that it was all about her and about someone who was deceiving her and would ruin her.

In the romances, someone left her, moved away, she suffered from melancholy, burned his letters in the fireplace, wasted and sick, dreamed of a meeting. True, sometimes this “someone” offered her some treasures and promised to love her forever.

Oh, I wish I hadn't met you

And I wouldn't love you

My heart wouldn't suffer

And I was happy forever.

Then another house appeared, a huge one, where they moved, apparently thanks to their father’s boss. He liked his father very much. Father attracted many with his kindness and trusting friendliness. They came to him not so much to consult what he could advise, but rather to talk things out. He listened, he knew how to listen sympathetically, delving into the essence of the matter with all his soul. It happens that a person needs this more than real help. We can assume that D. inherited this paternal trait.

Subsequently, D. extracted some little things from his memory, they came up randomly, now a word, now a familiar gesture, stirring up something long ago, once incomprehensible, another proposal gradually arose: in obtaining this luxury apartment the mother was also involved. Let's put it mildly - the mother also played a role. For this boss visited the old apartment, and more and more often. He played the guitar and his mother sang. The apartment was big. At that time, these lordly apartments in apartment buildings the state requisitioned and distributed different organizations. Six rooms, one of them is a hall. The rooms are large, a large kitchen with a stove, a pantry. The main front rooms have windows facing the street, others facing the courtyard.

The beauty was the space. You could run around the apartment, rush as fast as you could down the corridor. Soon, her father’s daughter, half-sister D., arrived from Kyiv. She entered the medical school, lived in a hostel, came to visit. With D. they played skittles in the hall. They were rolling balls on the parquet floor, it was such a big hall.

In addition to the apartment, D. lived in the yard. The yard was filled with a smelly garbage dump, with rats, with hanging laundry, local drunks, weirdos, and gossip. The yard was dirty; the back entrances of all the front entrances opened onto it. The courtyard lived from morning to evening working life. Here they chopped wood, sawed it, washed it, boiled it in the laundry, and carts came to unload the trash heap. Life also went on without work - in the evening women sat on benches and chatted. Games of those years, forgotten, gone. The copper coins were heavy, they played “knocking out”. D. was a master of beating with a heavy copper coin so as to turn the coins upside down with the coat of arms. Another game was “to the wall”. We played “siskin”. But they liked to play outdoor games more, team games - rounders,

into a game that for some reason was called “Stander”, “Cossacks-Robbers”.

The yard children had their own unwritten charter, or rather, code of conduct. D. experienced the danger of being branded mama's boy. They were teased by “Gogochka”: “Boy Goga, boy Goga, the semolina porridge is ready!” They treated greedy people mercilessly: “Greedy beef, empty chocolate.” Or this: “Crybaby-wax-shoe polish, there’s a hot pancake on your nose!” It’s not so much about the uniform, it was murderous how it was all pronounced, they could tease you to tears: “The regiment commander is nose to ceiling!”, “Imagining the first class, where you are going, to a resort!” There were so many of them, yard teasers! D. was immediately passed off as a sailor's suit: “Sailor - a blast from the stove!” Every now and then they put him in his place: “They beat you desperately for accidents,” “Put up, put up and don’t fight anymore.”

They weaned us from complaining to our parents, weaned us off living, and taught us how to fight according to the rules.

The house was examined, crawled from top to bottom. Basements - where unimaginable junk was stored in cubicles, firewood, old furniture, rats ran around there, it smelled of rot. It was worse in the attics. There was something stirring and whispering, mattresses were found there on which someone was sleeping, green cat eyes flickered in the liquid darkness. There were ropes hanging. Stacks of old pre-revolutionary magazines. This is where the scaring began, who would scare whom, the best place for ambushes, to scream with a wild cry, or even better, with a newspaper cracker or to fuck with an inflated paper bag. The warm brick chimneys oozed smoke. Smoky beams are the exposed skeleton of the house. Almost without partitions, a huge space opened up above all the apartments; one could climb out onto the iron roof. Someone was hiding in the attic, that's a fact, there were cigarette butts lying around, cans: “Now, as if I’m stabbing the director, you’ll kick with kicks and head with a moto!”

The yard school taught us to spit through our teeth. D. succeeded, he had a gap between his front teeth, and the spit flew like an arrow. It was worse with the whistle. I just couldn't learn how to whistle. Fingers in the mouth produce the strongest effect. They tried to stick his fingers in, but it didn’t work.

And suddenly one summer day, already in the village, a deafeningly strong whistle escaped him, he was alone in the forest, no one heard, there were no witnesses, he whistled and whistled, happy with his victory.

Not right away school society began to overpower the yard. The advantage of the court was freedom. Self-government, your own court, your own rules, without teachers, without school regulations. And, of course, there is prohibition. You could swear to your heart's content. Someone has got “finks”. Stories about gopniks, about punks, about the “Chubarov case,” how some girl was raped in Chubarov Lane. Yard education included gangster nicknames, thieves' songs, wrestling techniques, fights, the adventures of swindlers and, of course, sex. The courtyard served as an academy for forbidden education. What was excluded from school lessons and it was strictly forbidden, it could be obtained in the yard. In this sense, the “courtiers” quickly made up for their gaps. Love, abortion, the process of making children, prostitutes, mistresses, infidelity, sexually transmitted diseases, menstruation, condoms, masturbation - in a word, “everything about sex”, which in the family is not supposed to be discussed “in front of children”.

Did this speak about his love for language, about his linguistic inclinations? Hardly. Notice the careful word we chose - inclinations. Childhood rarely provides an opportunity to guess anything about a child's future. No matter how hard fathers and mothers try to see what will come of their child, no, it is not justified. They all see childhood as a preface to adult life, as preparation. In fact, childhood is an independent kingdom, a separate country, independent of the adult future, of parental plans; it, if you like, is the main part of life, it is the main age of a person. Furthermore, a person is destined for childhood, born for childhood, in old age childhood is remembered most of all, so we can say that childhood is the future of an adult.

Russian language

12 out of 24

(1) Childhood rarely makes it possible to guess anything about the child’s future. (2) No matter how hard fathers and mothers try to see what will come of their child, no, it is not justified. (3) They all see childhood as a preface to adult life, preparation. (4) In fact, childhood is an independent kingdom, a separate country, independent of the adult future, of parental plans; it, if you like, is the main part of life, it is the main age of a person. (5) Moreover, a person is destined for childhood, born for childhood, in old age childhood is remembered most of all, so we can say that childhood is the future of an adult.

(6) Childhood was the happiest time of my life. (7) Not because things got worse. (8) And for next years I thank fate, and there were a lot of good things there. (9) But childhood was different from the rest of my life in that then the world seemed arranged for me, I was a joy for my father and mother, I was for no one, there was no sense of duty, there were no responsibilities, well, pick up the snot, well go to bed. (10) Childhood is irresponsible. (11) It was then that responsibilities around the house began to appear. (12) Go. (13) Bring it. (14) Wash... (15) School appeared, lessons appeared, a clock appeared, time appeared.

(16) I lived among ants, grass, berries, geese. (17) I could lie in a field, fly among the clouds, run to God knows where, just rush, be a locomotive, a car, a horse. (18) Could talk to any adult. (19) This was the kingdom of freedom. (20) Not only external, but also internal. (21) I could look from the bridge into the water for hours. (22) What did I see there? (23) I stood idle for a long time at the shooting range. (24) The forge was a magical sight.

(25) As a child, I loved to lie for hours on the warm logs of the raft, look into the water, how they played there in the reddish depths, the bleaks glistened.

(26) You turn on your back, clouds are floating in the sky, and it seems that my raft is floating. (27) The water gurgles under the logs, where it floats - of course, to distant countries, there are palm trees, deserts, camels. (28) In children's countries there were no skyscrapers, no highways, there was a country of Fenimore Cooper, sometimes Jack London - he had snowy, blizzard, frosty ones.

(29) Childhood is black bread, warm, fragrant, there was no such thing later, it remained there, it green peas, this is the grass under bare feet, these are pies with carrots, rye, with potatoes, this is homemade kvass. (30) Where does the food of our childhood disappear? (31) And why does it always disappear? (32) Poppy seeds, lean sugar, millet porridge with pumpkin...

(33) There were so many different happy, cheerful things... (34) Childhood remains the main thing and gets prettier over the years. (35) I cried there too, I was unhappy. (36) Fortunately, this was completely forgotten, only the charm of that life remained. (37) Namely life. (38) There was no love, no glory, no travel, only life, a pure feeling of delight at one’s existence under this sky. (39) The value of friendship or the happiness of having parents was not yet realized, all this later, later, and there, on the raft, only me, the sky, the river, sweet foggy dreams...

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Childhood is important stage In human life. It's a carefree time. I think that most of us remember our childhood with tender trepidation. IN this text D. A. Granin raises the problem of the value of childhood. This problem is always relevant, because it is during this period of time that the child learns to interact with the world around him, forms his ideas about it, acquires skills and character traits that will influence the development of his personality in the future.

To prove his thoughts, the author cites his reasoning: “childhood is an independent kingdom, a separate country... it, if you like, is the main part of life, it is the main age of a person.” D. Granin emphasizes that childhood is one of the most significant stages of a person’s life. Also, the author says about his childhood, describing how he could spend hours looking from a bridge into the water, lying on the logs of a raft, looking at the clouds: “The value of friendship or the happiness of having parents was not yet realized, all this later, later, and there, on the raft, only me, the sky, the river, sweet foggy dreams...” D. Granin describes his unity with nature, shows the carelessness of that time, with tender feelings remembers childhood.

I agree with D. A. Granin, because this is the time that has a strong influence on us. We learn to understand nature, the world. The child observes the events taking place and tries to interact with him. Every person probably remembers with trepidation that fabulous time when it seemed that time, problems and worries did not exist. To prove this position, let us turn to arguments from fiction.

Firstly, a shining example the values ​​of childhood is the work of L.N. Tolstoy "War and Peace". The author describes the Rostov family, the warm atmosphere family relations where children are raised. Brothers and sisters are very friendly with each other and open. Since childhood, Natasha has been vaccinated important values such as love, attention, caring for others. The girl grew up watching your parents, taking over and

Criteria

  • 1 of 1 K1 Formulation of source text problems
  • 3 of 3 K2