Okruzhaiushchii Mir 4 Klass Chitat | Poglazova Shilin

"I get it now," Anya said, closing the book. "The 'World Around Us' isn't just what's outside the window. It’s the stars above us, the soil beneath us, and the stories of the people who walked here before we did."

"Look," Misha whispered, pointing to a diagram of the solar system. "The book says we are just a tiny part of the universe, but then it switches to Peter the Great. How does it all fit together?" okruzhaiushchii mir 4 klass chitat poglazova shilin

One moment, they were standing on the cold, wind-swept banks of the Neva River in the 1700s. They saw men in heavy coats hauling timber. "That’s Peter I!" Anya gasped, recognizing the tall figure from the portraits in Chapter 3. They watched as the foundations of St. Petersburg were laid, feeling the damp mist of the Baltic Sea on their faces. They understood now—history wasn't just dates; it was the sweat and dreams of people. "I get it now," Anya said, closing the book

"The Big Dipper," Misha said softly. "It’s the same sky the ancient Slavs looked at, and the same sky the astronauts see today." "The book says we are just a tiny

With another flash, the scene shifted. The cold wind turned into a dry, floral breeze. They were standing in a vast, golden field of the Russian Steppe. Above them, the sky was a deep indigo, filled with more stars than they had ever seen in the city. Misha looked at the constellations they had memorized for their science quiz.

The textbook glowed one last time, and the children found themselves back in the library. The birch bark bookmark was gone, but the textbook no longer looked like a pile of homework.

Suddenly, a thin, shimmering bookmark fell out from between the pages. It wasn't a normal bookmark; it looked like a strip of birch bark with glowing ink. On it was written: “To understand the world, you must see with both the heart of a traveler and the eyes of a historian.”

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