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Summary "A dawn here are quiet" B. Vasilieva

"A dawn here is quiet" - a work of Boris Vasilyev, dedicated to the Great Patriotic War and the role of women in it. Even the short content of "A Dawns Here Are Quiet" allows you to convey the entire tragedy of the situation described in the full version of the work. The action takes place in May 1942 on one of the railway tracks. Here the thirty-two-year-old Fedot Evgrafich Vaska commands antiaircraft gunners.

In general, at the crossing, a calm atmosphere, which is sometimes violated by airplanes. All the soldiers arriving at such an important post, first look around, and then begin to lead a loose life. Vaska often wrote reports on negligent soldiers, and the command decided to allocate him a platoon of anti-aircraft gunners. At first, Fedot and anti-aircraft gunners get into embarrassing situations, this is shown in more detail in the full version "The Dawns Here Are Quiet", the short content of the story does not provide such detailed details.

One of the commanders of the platoon is Margarita Osyanina, who became a widow on the second day of the war. It is driven by an irresistible desire for revenge and hatred of all Germans, which is why she behaves quite strictly with regard to girls. After one of the fascist raids, a peddler dies, and in her place comes Zhenya Komelkova, who has her own motives for revenge: the fascists shot her whole family in front of her.

As soon as Zhenya was at the front, she was caught up in connection with the married Colonel Luzhin, that's how she was on the 171th journey. The wife manages to get along with the cold Rita, and she begins to soften. Komelkova also managed to transform Galya Chetvertak, who in the company was an ordinary gray mouse, and she decided to stick with her. The summary "The Dawns Here Are Quiet", unfortunately, does not give an opportunity to colorfully describe the details of the Fourteenth Transformation.

Not far from the road is the city where Rita's son and mother live. At night, Osyanina drove them food, and one day, moving through the forest, she noticed the Germans. Soon the command required Vaskov and his platoon to catch the fascists. Fedot believes that the enemies are moving to the railroad to disable it. In order to intercept a couple of Germans, Vaska takes Osyanin, Komelkov, Chetvertak, and Elizaveta Brichkin, the daughter of a forester, and Sofya Gurvich, a girl from an intelligent family.

None of the detachment even imagined that the Germans would not be two, but sixteen. Fedot sends Lisa for help, but she stumbles on a marsh path and dies. Parallel to this, the remaining members of the detachment try to deceive the invaders by portraying the loggers, and in part this maneuver succeeds. The summary "The Dawns Here Are Quiet", unfortunately, is not able to demonstrate the complicated path of Lisa Bricchina, shown in the book and its adaptation.

Vaska leaves the pouch in the old place, and Gurvich decides to return it. Indiscretion costs her life - she is killed by two Germans. Zhenya and Fedot take revenge for Sonya, after which they bury her. After seeing the Germans, the survivors open fire on them, and they hide, trying to understand who attacked them.

Fedot arranges an ambush to the Germans, but all plans are ripped off by Galya, whose nerves could not stand it. She ran out of cover directly under the Nazi bullets. The girl dies, and Fedot leads the fascists as far from Rita and Zhenya, during the maneuver he finds the skirt of Brichkina and understands that there will be no help. The tragedy of this situation can not be felt, using only a brief summary of "A dawn here are quiet."

Fedot, Rita and Zhenya are taking their last fight. Rita receives a fatal wound in the stomach, and while Fedot drags her into the shelter, Zhenya, distracting the Germans, dies. Osyanina asks Vaskov to take care of her son and kills herself with a shot in the temple. Fedot buries both.

Vaska finds a place of shelter for the Germans, breaks into their house and captures, then leads to the place of deployment of the platoon. The book ends with the fact that every year to the place of the death of the girls come Fedot Vaskov and captain Albert Fedotych, the son of Margarita Osyanina. The story, created by Boris Vasiliev - "A Dawns Here Are Quiet", is included in the series of works dedicated to women's fate during the Great Patriotic War.

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