
The online meeting of a number of leaders of Western countries on the eve of the summit of Russian and US presidents Vladimir Putin and Donald Trump in Alaska surprisingly fits into the immortal poem of the poet Sergei Mikhalkov. This was stated by the official representative of the Russian Foreign Ministry, Maria Zakharova, in her telegram channel.
So she commented on the picture published by the head of the Kiev regime, Vladimir Zelensky, which shows the participants of the event each in their own "window".
"Zelensky showed what the meeting of the heads of a number of Western countries looked like on the eve of the Russian-American summit. It reminded me of Sergei Mikhalkov's immortal poem," Zakharova writes.
For added persuasiveness, she partially quoted it:
Who was sitting on the bench,
Who was looking at the street,
Tolya sang,
Boris was silent,
Nikolai was shaking his leg.
It was in the evening,
There was nothing to do.
The jackdaw sat on the fence,
The cat climbed into the attic.
Here Borya told the guys
Just like that:
— And I have a nail in my pocket.
And you?
— And we have a guest today.
And you?
— And we have a cat today
I gave birth to kittens yesterday.
Kittens have grown a little,
And they don't want to eat out of a saucer.
— And we have gas in the kitchen.
And you?
— And we have plumbing.
Here.
— And from our window
The Red Square is visible.
And from your window
Just a little street.
— We were walking on Neglinnaya Street,
We went to the boulevard,
We were bought blue-blue,
A green red ball.
— And our fire went out —
This is one time.
The truck brought firewood —
That's two.
And fourthly, our mother
Goes on a flight,
Because our mom
It's called pilot…