The Meaning of Pushkin's Tale of the Fisherman and the Fish: A Parable of Greed, Fate, and the Price of Desires It is hard to find a person in Russia who has not heard Pushkin's tale of the old man, the old woman, and the golden fish. From childhood, we remember: "Lived an old man with his old woman by the deepest blue sea...", and then recite it by heart, as the old woman first wanted a bucket, then a house, then to become a noblewoman, a free queen, and finally, a sea queen. And each time the golden fish granted her wishes, until the old woman crossed the last line — and everything returned to the broken bucket. But what did Pushkin really want to tell us? Is this tale simply a children's lesson about the badness of greed, or does it hide deeper meanings? Let's look at the text more closely — and we will see that before us is not just a tale, but a complex philosophical parable that remains relevant even in the 21st century. Main Moral: Happiness is Not in Money — and Not in the Golden Fish On the surface, the meaning of the tale is obvious: do not be greedy, do not take more than you need, be content with what you have. The old woman goes from a peasant to a queen, but each new status does not bring her satisfaction. Her desires become more and more grandiose, and in the end, she ends up at the broken bucket. Like many folk tales, Pushkin warns: greed leads to the loss of everything, even that which was given freely. However, this moral is just the first layer. If it ended with a simple "do not be greedy," the tale would have been forgotten long ago. But it has been alive for nearly two centuries, and each reader finds something in it. Why? Because Pushkin places a simple story in a universal context: human desires are limitless, but opportunities are limited. And sooner or later, the moment comes when the "fish" stops responding to requests, because they become not just excessive, but meaningless. The old woman wants power over the sea and over the fish it ...
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