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The Adventures of Pinocchio
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第1章
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[PseudonymofCarloLorenzini]

CHAPTER1

HowithappenedthatMastroCherry,carpenter,foundapieceofwoodthatweptandlaughedlikeachildCenturiesagotherelived——

"Aking!"mylittlereaderswillsayimmediately。

No,children,youaremistaken。Onceuponatimetherewasapieceofwood。Itwasnotanexpensivepieceofwood。Farfromit。Justacommonblockoffirewood,oneofthosethick,solidlogsthatareputonthefireinwintertomakecoldroomscozyandwarm。

Idonotknowhowthisreallyhappened,yetthefactremainsthatonefinedaythispieceofwoodfounditselfintheshopofanoldcarpenter。HisrealnamewasMastroAntonio,buteveryonecalledhimMastroCherry,forthetipofhisnosewassoroundandredandshinythatitlookedlikearipecherry。

Assoonashesawthatpieceofwood,MastroCherrywasfilledwithjoy。Rubbinghishandstogetherhappily,hemumbledhalftohimself:

"Thishascomeinthenickoftime。Ishalluseittomakethelegofatable。"

Hegraspedthehatchetquicklytopeeloffthebarkandshapethewood。Butashewasabouttogiveitthefirstblow,hestoodstillwitharmuplifted,forhehadheardawee,littlevoicesayinabeseechingtone:"Pleasebecareful!

Donothitmesohard!"

WhatalookofsurpriseshoneonMastroCherry’sface!Hisfunnyfacebecamestillfunnier。

Heturnedfrightenedeyesabouttheroomtofindoutwherethatwee,littlevoicehadcomefromandhesawnoone!Helookedunderthebench——noone!Hepeepedinsidethecloset——noone!Hesearchedamongtheshavings——

noone!Heopenedthedoortolookupanddownthestreet——andstillnoone!

"Oh,Isee!"hethensaid,laughingandscratchinghisWig。

"ItcaneasilybeseenthatIonlythoughtIheardthetinyvoicesaythewords!Well,well——toworkoncemore。"

Hestruckamostsolemnblowuponthepieceofwood。

"Oh,oh!Youhurt!"criedthesamefar-awaylittlevoice。

MastroCherrygrewdumb,hiseyespoppedoutofhishead,hismouthopenedwide,andhistonguehungdownonhischin。

Assoonasheregainedtheuseofhissenses,hesaid,tremblingandstutteringfromfright:

"Wheredidthatvoicecomefrom,whenthereisnoonearound?Mightitbethatthispieceofwoodhaslearnedtoweepandcrylikeachild?Icanhardlybelieveit。Hereitis——apieceofcommonfirewood,goodonlytoburninthestove,thesameasanyother。Yet——

mightsomeonebehiddeninit?Ifso,theworseforhim。

I’llfixhim!"

Withthesewords,hegrabbedthelogwithbothhandsandstartedtoknockitaboutunmercifully。Hethrewittothefloor,againstthewallsoftheroom,andevenuptotheceiling。

Helistenedforthetinyvoicetomoanandcry。

Hewaitedtwominutes——nothing;fiveminutes——nothing;

tenminutes——nothing。

"Oh,Isee,"hesaid,tryingbravelytolaughandrufflinguphiswigwithhishand。"ItcaneasilybeseenIonlyimaginedIheardthetinyvoice!Well,well——toworkoncemore!"

Thepoorfellowwasscaredhalftodeath,sohetriedtosingagaysonginordertogaincourage。

Hesetasidethehatchetandpickeduptheplanetomakethewoodsmoothandeven,butashedrewittoandfro,heheardthesametinyvoice。Thistimeitgiggledasitspoke:

"Stopit!Oh,stopit!Ha,ha,ha!Youticklemystomach。"

ThistimepoorMastroCherryfellasifshot。Whenheopenedhiseyes,hefoundhimselfsittingonthefloor。

Hisfacehadchanged;frighthadturnedeventhetipofhisnosefromredtodeepestpurple。

CHAPTER2

MastroCherrygivesthepieceofwoodtohisfriendGeppetto,whotakesittomakehimselfaMarionettethatwilldance,fence,andturnsomersaultsInthatveryinstant,aloudknocksoundedonthedoor。

"Comein,"saidthecarpenter,nothavinganatomofstrengthleftwithwhichtostandup。

Atthewords,thedooropenedandadapperlittleoldmancamein。HisnamewasGeppetto,buttotheboysoftheneighborhoodhewasPolendina,[1]onaccountofthewighealwaysworewhichwasjustthecolorofyellowcorn。

[1]CornmealmushGeppettohadaverybadtemper。WoetotheonewhocalledhimPolendina!Hebecameaswildasabeastandnoonecouldsoothehim。

"Goodday,MastroAntonio,"saidGeppetto。"Whatareyoudoingonthefloor?"

"IamteachingtheantstheirABC’s。"

"Goodlucktoyou!"

"Whatbroughtyouhere,friendGeppetto?"

"Mylegs。Anditmayflatteryoutoknow,MastroAntonio,thatIhavecometoyoutobegforafavor。"

"HereIam,atyourservice,"answeredthecarpenter,raisinghimselfontohisknees。

"Thismorningafineideacametome。"

"Let’shearit。"

"IthoughtofmakingmyselfabeautifulwoodenMarionette。Itmustbewonderful,onethatwillbeabletodance,fence,andturnsomersaults。WithitIintendtogoaroundtheworld,toearnmycrustofbreadandcupofwine。Whatdoyouthinkofit?"

"Bravo,Polendina!"criedthesametinyvoicewhichcamefromnooneknewwhere。

OnhearinghimselfcalledPolendina,MastroGeppettoturnedthecolorofaredpepperand,facingthecarpenter,saidtohimangrily:

"Whydoyouinsultme?"

"Whoisinsultingyou?"

"YoucalledmePolendina。"

"Ididnot。"

"Isupposeyouthink_I_did!YetIKNOWitwasyou。"

"No!"

"Yes!"

"No!"

"Yes!"

Andgrowingangriereachmoment,theywentfromwordstoblows,andfinallybegantoscratchandbiteandslapeachother。

Whenthefightwasover,MastroAntoniohadGeppetto’syellowwiginhishandsandGeppettofoundthecarpenter’scurlywiginhismouth。

"Givemebackmywig!"shoutedMastroAntonioinasurlyvoice。

"Youreturnmineandwe’llbefriends。"

Thetwolittleoldmen,eachwithhisownwigbackonhisownhead,shookhandsandsworetobegoodfriendsfortherestoftheirlives。

"Wellthen,MastroGeppetto,"saidthecarpenter,toshowheborehimnoillwill,"whatisityouwant?"

"IwantapieceofwoodtomakeaMarionette。Willyougiveittome?"

MastroAntonio,verygladindeed,wentimmediatelytohisbenchtogetthepieceofwoodwhichhadfrightenedhimsomuch。Butashewasabouttogiveittohisfriend,withaviolentjerkitslippedoutofhishandsandhitagainstpoorGeppetto’sthinlegs。

"Ah!Isthisthegentleway,MastroAntonio,inwhichyoumakeyourgifts?Youhavemademealmostlame!"

"IsweartoyouIdidnotdoit!"

"Itwas_I_,ofcourse!"

"It’sthefaultofthispieceofwood。"

"You’reright;butrememberyouweretheonetothrowitatmylegs。"

"Ididnotthrowit!"

"Liar!"

"Geppetto,donotinsultmeorIshallcallyouPolendina。"

"Idiot。"

"Polendina!"

"Donkey!"

"Polendina!"

"Uglymonkey!"

"Polendina!"

OnhearinghimselfcalledPolendinaforthethirdtime,Geppettolosthisheadwithrageandthrewhimselfuponthecarpenter。Thenandtheretheygaveeachotherasoundthrashing。

Afterthisfight,MastroAntoniohadtwomorescratchesonhisnose,andGeppettohadtwobuttonsmissingfromhiscoat。Thushavingsettledtheiraccounts,theyshookhandsandsworetobegoodfriendsfortherestoftheirlives。

ThenGeppettotookthefinepieceofwood,thankedMastroAntonio,andlimpedawaytowardhome。

CHAPTER3

Assoonashegetshome,GeppettofashionstheMarionetteandcallsitPinocchio。ThefirstpranksoftheMarionetteLittleasGeppetto’shousewas,itwasneatandcomfortable。Itwasasmallroomonthegroundfloor,withatinywindowunderthestairway。Thefurniturecouldnothavebeenmuchsimpler:averyoldchair,aricketyoldbed,andatumble-downtable。Afireplacefullofburninglogswaspaintedonthewalloppositethedoor。Overthefire,therewaspaintedapotfullofsomethingwhichkeptboilinghappilyawayandsendingupcloudsofwhatlookedlikerealsteam。

Assoonashereachedhome,GeppettotookhistoolsandbegantocutandshapethewoodintoaMarionette。

"WhatshallIcallhim?"hesaidtohimself。"IthinkI’llcallhimPINOCCHIO。Thisnamewillmakehisfortune。

IknewawholefamilyofPinocchionce——Pinocchiothefather,Pinocchiathemother,andPinocchithechildren——

andtheywerealllucky。Therichestofthembeggedforhisliving。"

AfterchoosingthenameforhisMarionette,Geppettosetseriouslytoworktomakethehair,theforehead,theeyes。Fancyhissurprisewhenhenoticedthattheseeyesmovedandthenstaredfixedlyathim。Geppetto,seeingthis,feltinsultedandsaidinagrievedtone:

"Uglywoodeneyes,whydoyoustareso?"

Therewasnoanswer。

Aftertheeyes,Geppettomadethenose,whichbegantostretchassoonasfinished。Itstretchedandstretchedandstretchedtillitbecamesolong,itseemedendless。

PoorGeppettokeptcuttingitandcuttingit,butthemorehecut,thelongergrewthatimpertinentnose。Indespairheletitalone。

Nexthemadethemouth。

Nosoonerwasitfinishedthanitbegantolaughandpokefunathim。

"Stoplaughing!"saidGeppettoangrily;buthemightaswellhavespokentothewall。

"Stoplaughing,Isay!"heroaredinavoiceofthunder。

Themouthstoppedlaughing,butitstuckoutalongtongue。

Notwishingtostartanargument,Geppettomadebelievehesawnothingandwentonwithhiswork。

Afterthemouth,hemadethechin,thentheneck,theshoulders,thestomach,thearms,andthehands。

Ashewasabouttoputthelasttouchesonthefingertips,Geppettofelthiswigbeingpulledoff。Heglancedupandwhatdidhesee?HisyellowwigwasintheMarionette’shand。"Pinocchio,givememywig!"

Butinsteadofgivingitback,Pinocchioputitonhisownhead,whichwashalfswallowedupinit。

Atthatunexpectedtrick,Geppettobecameverysadanddowncast,moresothanhehadeverbeenbefore。

"Pinocchio,youwickedboy!"hecriedout。"Youarenotyetfinished,andyoustartoutbybeingimpudenttoyourpooroldfather。Verybad,myson,verybad!"

Andhewipedawayatear。

Thelegsandfeetstillhadtobemade。Assoonastheyweredone,Geppettofeltasharpkickonthetipofhisnose。

"Ideserveit!"hesaidtohimself。"IshouldhavethoughtofthisbeforeImadehim。Nowit’stoolate!"

HetookholdoftheMarionetteunderthearmsandputhimonthefloortoteachhimtowalk。

Pinocchio’slegsweresostiffthathecouldnotmovethem,andGeppettoheldhishandandshowedhimhowtoputoutonefootaftertheother。

Whenhislegswerelimberedup,Pinocchiostartedwalkingbyhimselfandranallaroundtheroom。Hecametotheopendoor,andwithoneleaphewasoutintothestreet。Awayheflew!

PoorGeppettoranafterhimbutwasunabletocatchhim,forPinocchioraninleapsandbounds,histwowoodenfeet,astheybeatonthestonesofthestreet,makingasmuchnoiseastwentypeasantsinwoodenshoes。

"Catchhim!Catchhim!"Geppettokeptshouting。

Butthepeopleinthestreet,seeingawoodenMarionetterunninglikethewind,stoodstilltostareandtolaughuntiltheycried。

Atlast,bysheerluck,aCarabineer[2]happenedalong,who,hearingallthatnoise,thoughtthatitmightbearunawaycolt,andstoodbravelyinthemiddleofthestreet,withlegswideapart,firmlyresolvedtostopitandpreventanytrouble。

[2]AmilitarypolicemanPinocchiosawtheCarabineerfromafarandtriedhisbesttoescapebetweenthelegsofthebigfellow,butwithoutsuccess。

TheCarabineergrabbedhimbythenose(itwasanextremelylongoneandseemedmadeonpurposeforthatverything)andreturnedhimtoMastroGeppetto。

ThelittleoldmanwantedtopullPinocchio’sears。

Thinkhowhefeltwhen,uponsearchingforthem,hediscoveredthathehadforgottentomakethem!

AllhecoulddowastoseizePinocchiobythebackoftheneckandtakehimhome。Ashewasdoingso,heshookhimtwoorthreetimesandsaidtohimangrily:

"We’regoinghomenow。Whenwegethome,thenwe’llsettlethismatter!"

Pinocchio,onhearingthis,threwhimselfonthegroundandrefusedtotakeanotherstep。Onepersonafteranothergatheredaroundthetwo。

Somesaidonething,someanother。

"PoorMarionette,"calledoutaman。"Iamnotsurprisedhedoesn’twanttogohome。Geppetto,nodoubt,willbeathimunmercifully,heissomeanandcruel!"

"Geppettolookslikeagoodman,"addedanother,"butwithboyshe’sarealtyrant。IfweleavethatpoorMarionetteinhishandshemaytearhimtopieces!"

Theysaidsomuchthat,finally,theCarabineerendedmattersbysettingPinocchioatlibertyanddraggingGeppettotoprison。Thepooroldfellowdidnotknowhowtodefendhimself,butweptandwailedlikeachildandsaidbetweenhissobs:

"Ungratefulboy!TothinkItriedsohardtomakeyouawell-behavedMarionette!Ideserveit,however!Ishouldhavegiventhemattermorethought。"

Whathappenedafterthisisanalmostunbelievablestory,butyoumayreadit,dearchildren,inthechaptersthatfollow。

CHAPTER4

ThestoryofPinocchioandtheTalkingCricket,inwhichoneseesthatbadchildrendonotliketobecorrectedbythosewhoknowmorethantheydoVerylittletimedidittaketogetpooroldGeppettotoprison。Inthemeantimethatrascal,Pinocchio,freenowfromtheclutchesoftheCarabineer,wasrunningwildlyacrossfieldsandmeadows,takingoneshortcutafteranothertowardhome。Inhiswildflight,heleapedoverbramblesandbushes,andacrossbrooksandponds,asifhewereagoatoraharechasedbyhounds。

Onreachinghome,hefoundthehousedoorhalfopen。

Heslippedintotheroom,lockedthedoor,andthrewhimselfonthefloor,happyathisescape。

Buthishappinesslastedonlyashorttime,forjustthenheheardsomeonesaying:

"Cri-cri-cri!"

"Whoiscallingme?"askedPinocchio,greatlyfrightened。

"Iam!"

Pinocchioturnedandsawalargecricketcrawlingslowlyupthewall。

"Tellme,Cricket,whoareyou?"

"IamtheTalkingCricketandIhavebeenlivinginthisroomformorethanonehundredyears。"

"Today,however,thisroomismine,"saidtheMarionette,"andifyouwishtodomeafavor,getoutnow,anddon’tturnaroundevenonce。"

"Irefusetoleavethisspot,"answeredtheCricket,"untilIhavetoldyouagreattruth。"

"Tellit,then,andhurry。"

"Woetoboyswhorefusetoobeytheirparentsandrunawayfromhome!Theywillneverbehappyinthisworld,andwhentheyareoldertheywillbeverysorryforit。"

"Singon,Cricketmine,asyouplease。WhatIknowis,thattomorrow,atdawn,Ileavethisplaceforever。IfI

stayherethesamethingwillhappentomewhichhappenstoallotherboysandgirls。Theyaresenttoschool,andwhethertheywanttoornot,theymuststudy。Asforme,letmetellyou,Ihatetostudy!It’smuchmorefun,Ithink,tochaseafterbutterflies,climbtrees,andstealbirds’nests。"

"Poorlittlesilly!Don’tyouknowthatifyougoonlikethat,youwillgrowintoaperfectdonkeyandthatyou’llbethelaughingstockofeveryone?"

"Keepstill,youuglyCricket!"criedPinocchio。

ButtheCricket,whowasawiseoldphilosopher,insteadofbeingoffendedatPinocchio’simpudence,continuedinthesametone:

"Ifyoudonotlikegoingtoschool,whydon’tyouatleastlearnatrade,sothatyoucanearnanhonestliving?"

"ShallItellyousomething?"askedPinocchio,whowasbeginningtolosepatience。"Ofallthetradesintheworld,thereisonlyonethatreallysuitsme。"

"Andwhatcanthatbe?"

"Thatofeating,drinking,sleeping,playing,andwanderingaroundfrommorningtillnight。"

"Letmetellyou,foryourowngood,Pinocchio,"saidtheTalkingCricketinhiscalmvoice,"thatthosewhofollowthattradealwaysendupinthehospitalorinprison。"

"Careful,uglyCricket!Ifyoumakemeangry,you’llbesorry!"

"PoorPinocchio,Iamsorryforyou。"

"Why?"

"BecauseyouareaMarionetteand,whatismuchworse,youhaveawoodenhead。"

Attheselastwords,Pinocchiojumpedupinafury,tookahammerfromthebench,andthrewitwithallhisstrengthattheTalkingCricket。

Perhapshedidnotthinkhewouldstrikeit。But,sadtorelate,mydearchildren,hedidhittheCricket,straightonitshead。

Withalastweak"cri-cri-cri"thepoorCricketfellfromthewall,dead!

CHAPTER5

Pinocchioishungryandlooksforaneggtocookhimselfanomelet;

but,tohissurprise,theomeletfliesoutofthewindowIftheCricket’sdeathscaredPinocchioatall,itwasonlyforaveryfewmoments。For,asnightcameon,aqueer,emptyfeelingatthepitofhisstomachremindedtheMarionettethathehadeatennothingasyet。

Aboy’sappetitegrowsveryfast,andinafewmomentsthequeer,emptyfeelinghadbecomehunger,andthehungergrewbiggerandbigger,untilsoonhewasasravenousasabear。

PoorPinocchiorantothefireplacewherethepotwasboilingandstretchedouthishandtotakethecoveroff,buttohisamazementthepotwasonlypainted!Thinkhowhefelt!Hislongnosebecameatleasttwoincheslonger。

Heranabouttheroom,duginalltheboxesanddrawers,andevenlookedunderthebedinsearchofapieceofbread,hardthoughitmightbe,oracookie,orperhapsabitoffish。

Aboneleftbyadogwouldhavetastedgoodtohim!

Buthefoundnothing。

Andmeanwhilehishungergrewandgrew。TheonlyreliefpoorPinocchiohadwastoyawn;andhecertainlydidyawn,suchabigyawnthathismouthstretchedouttothetipsofhisears。Soonhebecamedizzyandfaint。

Heweptandwailedtohimself:"TheTalkingCricketwasright。ItwaswrongofmetodisobeyFatherandtorunawayfromhome。Ifhewereherenow,Iwouldn’tbesohungry!Oh,howhorribleitistobehungry!"

Suddenly,hesaw,amongthesweepingsinacorner,somethingroundandwhitethatlookedverymuchlikeahen’segg。Inajiffyhepounceduponit。Itwasanegg。

TheMarionette’sjoyknewnobounds。Itisimpossibletodescribeit,youmustpictureittoyourself。Certainthathewasdreaming,heturnedtheeggoverandoverinhishands,fondledit,kissedit,andtalkedtoit:

"Andnow,howshallIcookyou?ShallImakeanomelet?No,itisbettertofryyouinapan!

OrshallIdrinkyou?No,thebestwayistofryyouinthepan。Youwilltastebetter。"

Nosoonersaidthandone。Heplacedalittlepanoverafootwarmerfullofhotcoals。Inthepan,insteadofoilorbutter,hepouredalittlewater。Assoonasthewaterstartedtoboil——tac!——hebroketheeggshell。Butinplaceofthewhiteandtheyolkoftheegg,alittleyellowChick,fluffyandgayandsmiling,escapedfromit。BowingpolitelytoPinocchio,hesaidtohim:

"Many,manythanks,indeed,Mr。Pinocchio,forhavingsavedmethetroubleofbreakingmyshell!Good-byandgoodlucktoyouandremembermetothefamily!"

Withthesewordshespreadouthiswingsand,dartingtotheopenwindow,heflewawayintospacetillhewasoutofsight。

ThepoorMarionettestoodasifturnedtostone,withwideeyes,openmouth,andtheemptyhalvesoftheegg-

shellinhishands。Whenhecametohimself,hebegantocryandshriekatthetopofhislungs,stampinghisfeetonthegroundandwailingallthewhile:

"TheTalkingCricketwasright!IfIhadnotrunawayfromhomeandifFatherwereherenow,Ishouldnotbedyingofhunger。Oh,howhorribleitistobehungry!"

Andashisstomachkeptgrumblingmorethaneverandhehadnothingtoquietitwith,hethoughtofgoingoutforawalktothenear-byvillage,inthehopeoffindingsomecharitablepersonwhomightgivehimabitofbread。

CHAPTER6

Pinocchiofallsasleepwithhisfeetonafootwarmer,andawakensthenextdaywithhisfeetallburnedoffPinocchiohatedthedarkstreet,buthewassohungrythat,inspiteofit,heranoutofthehouse。Thenightwaspitchblack。Itthundered,andbrightflashesoflightningnowandagainshotacrossthesky,turningitintoaseaoffire。Anangrywindblewcoldandraiseddensecloudsofdust,whilethetreesshookandmoanedinaweirdway。

Pinocchiowasgreatlyafraidofthunderandlightning,butthehungerhefeltwasfargreaterthanhisfear。Inadozenleapsandbounds,hecametothevillage,tiredout,puffinglikeawhale,andwithtonguehanging。

Thewholevillagewasdarkanddeserted。Thestoreswereclosed,thedoors,thewindows。Inthestreets,notevenadogcouldbeseen。ItseemedtheVillageoftheDead。

Pinocchio,indesperation,ranuptoadoorway,threwhimselfuponthebell,andpulleditwildly,sayingtohimself:

"Someonewillsurelyanswerthat!"

Hewasright。Anoldmaninanightcapopenedthewindowandlookedout。Hecalleddownangrily:

"Whatdoyouwantatthishourofnight?"

"Willyoubegoodenoughtogivemeabitofbread?

Iamhungry。"

"WaitaminuteandI’llcomerightback,"answeredtheoldfellow,thinkinghehadtodealwithoneofthoseboyswholovetoroamaroundatnightringingpeople’sbellswhiletheyarepeacefullyasleep。

Afteraminuteortwo,thesamevoicecried:

"Getunderthewindowandholdoutyourhat!"

Pinocchiohadnohat,buthemanagedtogetunderthewindowjustintimetofeelashowerofice-coldwaterpourdownonhispoorwoodenhead,hisshoulders,andoverhiswholebody。

Hereturnedhomeaswetasarag,andtiredoutfromwearinessandhunger。

Ashenolongerhadanystrengthleftwithwhichtostand,hesatdownonalittlestoolandputhistwofeetonthestovetodrythem。

Therehefellasleep,andwhileheslept,hiswoodenfeetbegantoburn。Slowly,veryslowly,theyblackenedandturnedtoashes。

Pinocchiosnoredawayhappilyasifhisfeetwerenothisown。Atdawnheopenedhiseyesjustasaloudknockingsoundedatthedoor。

"Whoisit?"hecalled,yawningandrubbinghiseyes。

"ItisI,"answeredavoice。

ItwasthevoiceofGeppetto。

CHAPTER7

GeppettoreturnshomeandgiveshisownbreakfasttotheMarionetteThepoorMarionette,whowasstillhalfasleep,hadnotyetfoundoutthathistwofeetwereburnedandgone。AssoonasheheardhisFather’svoice,hejumpedupfromhisseattoopenthedoor,but,ashedidso,hestaggeredandfellheadlongtothefloor。

Infalling,hemadeasmuchnoiseasasackofwoodfallingfromthefifthstoryofahouse。

"Openthedoorforme!"Geppettoshoutedfromthestreet。

"Father,dearFather,Ican’t,"answeredtheMarionetteindespair,cryingandrollingonthefloor。

"Whycan’tyou?"

"Becausesomeonehaseatenmyfeet。"

"Andwhohaseatenthem?"

"Thecat,"answeredPinocchio,seeingthatlittleanimalbusilyplayingwithsomeshavingsinthecorneroftheroom。

"Open!Isay,"repeatedGeppetto,"orI’llgiveyouasoundwhippingwhenIgetin。"

"Father,believeme,Ican’tstandup。Oh,dear!

Oh,dear!Ishallhavetowalkonmykneesallmylife。"

Geppetto,thinkingthatallthesetearsandcrieswereonlyotherpranksoftheMarionette,climbedupthesideofthehouseandwentinthroughthewindow。

Atfirsthewasveryangry,butonseeingPinocchiostretchedoutonthefloorandreallywithoutfeet,hefeltverysadandsorrowful。Pickinghimupfromthefloor,hefondledandcaressedhim,talkingtohimwhilethetearsrandownhischeeks:

"MylittlePinocchio,mydearlittlePinocchio!

Howdidyouburnyourfeet?"

"Idon’tknow,Father,butbelieveme,thenighthasbeenaterribleoneandIshallrememberitaslongasIlive。

Thethunderwassonoisyandthelightningsobright——

andIwashungry。AndthentheTalkingCricketsaidtome,`Youdeserveit;youwerebad;’andIsaidtohim,`Careful,Cricket;’andhesaidtome,`YouareaMarionetteandyouhaveawoodenhead;’andIthrewthehammerathimandkilledhim。Itwashisownfault,forIdidn’twanttokillhim。AndIputthepanonthecoals,buttheChickflewawayandsaid,`I’llseeyouagain!Remembermetothefamily。’Andmyhungergrew,andIwentout,andtheoldmanwithanightcaplookedoutofthewindowandthrewwateronme,andIcamehomeandputmyfeetonthestovetodrythembecauseIwasstillhungry,andIfellasleepandnowmyfeetaregonebutmyhungerisn’t!

Oh!——Oh!——Oh!"AndpoorPinocchiobegantoscreamandcrysoloudlythathecouldbeheardformilesaround。

Geppetto,whohadunderstoodnothingofallthatjumbledtalk,exceptthattheMarionettewashungry,feltsorryforhim,andpullingthreepearsoutofhispocket,offeredthemtohim,saying:

"Thesethreepearswereformybreakfast,butIgivethemtoyougladly。Eatthemandstopweeping。"

"Ifyouwantmetoeatthem,pleasepeelthemforme。"

"Peelthem?"askedGeppetto,verymuchsurprised。"I

shouldneverhavethought,dearboyofmine,thatyouweresodaintyandfussyaboutyourfood。Bad,verybad!

Inthisworld,evenaschildren,wemustaccustomourselvestoeatofeverything,forweneverknowwhatlifemayholdinstoreforus!"

"Youmayberight,"answeredPinocchio,"butIwillnoteatthepearsiftheyarenotpeeled。Idon’tlikethem。"

AndgoodoldGeppettotookoutaknife,peeledthethreepears,andputtheskinsinarowonthetable。

Pinocchioateonepearinatwinklingandstartedtothrowthecoreaway,butGeppettoheldhisarm。

"Oh,no,don’tthrowitaway!Everythinginthisworldmaybeofsomeuse!"

"ButthecoreIwillnoteat!"criedPinocchioinanangrytone。

"Whoknows?"repeatedGeppettocalmly。

Andlaterthethreecoreswereplacedonthetablenexttotheskins。

Pinocchiohadeatenthethreepears,orratherdevouredthem。

Thenheyawneddeeply,andwailed:

"I’mstillhungry。"

"ButIhavenomoretogiveyou。"

"Really,nothing——nothing?"

"Ihaveonlythesethreecoresandtheseskins。"

"Verywell,then,"saidPinocchio,"ifthereisnothingelseI’lleatthem。"

Atfirsthemadeawryface,but,oneafteranother,theskinsandthecoresdisappeared。

"Ah!NowIfeelfine!"hesaidaftereatingthelastone。

"Yousee,"observedGeppetto,"thatIwasrightwhenItoldyouthatonemustnotbetoofussyandtoodaintyaboutfood。Mydear,weneverknowwhatlifemayhaveinstoreforus!"

CHAPTER8

GeppettomakesPinocchioanewpairoffeet,andsellshiscoattobuyhimanA-B-CbookTheMarionette,assoonashishungerwasappeased,startedtogrumbleandcrythathewantedanewpairoffeet。

ButMastroGeppetto,inordertopunishhimforhismischief,lethimalonethewholemorning。Afterdinnerhesaidtohim:

"WhyshouldImakeyourfeetoveragain?Toseeyourunawayfromhomeoncemore?"

"Ipromiseyou,"answeredtheMarionette,sobbing,"thatfromnowonI’llbegood——"

"Boysalwayspromisethatwhentheywantsomething,"

saidGeppetto。

"Ipromisetogotoschooleveryday,tostudy,andtosucceed——"

"Boysalwayssingthatsongwhentheywanttheirownwill。"

"ButIamnotlikeotherboys!IambetterthanallofthemandIalwaystellthetruth。Ipromiseyou,Father,thatI’lllearnatrade,andI’llbethecomfortandstaffofyouroldage。"

Geppetto,thoughtryingtolookverystern,felthiseyesfillwithtearsandhisheartsoftenwhenhesawPinocchiosounhappy。Hesaidnomore,buttakinghistoolsandtwopiecesofwood,hesettoworkdiligently。

Inlessthananhourthefeetwerefinished,twoslender,nimblelittlefeet,strongandquick,modeledasifbyanartist’shands。

"Closeyoureyesandsleep!"GeppettothensaidtotheMarionette。

Pinocchioclosedhiseyesandpretendedtobeasleep,whileGeppettostuckonthetwofeetwithabitofgluemeltedinaneggshell,doinghisworksowellthatthejointcouldhardlybeseen。

AssoonastheMarionettefelthisnewfeet,hegaveoneleapfromthetableandstartedtoskipandjumparound,asifhehadlosthisheadfromveryjoy。

"ToshowyouhowgratefulIamtoyou,Father,I’llgotoschoolnow。ButtogotoschoolIneedasuitofclothes。"

Geppettodidnothaveapennyinhispocket,sohemadehissonalittlesuitoffloweredpaper,apairofshoesfromthebarkofatree,andatinycapfromabitofdough。

Pinocchiorantolookathimselfinabowlofwater,andhefeltsohappythathesaidproudly:

"NowIlooklikeagentleman。"

"Truly,"answeredGeppetto。"Butrememberthatfineclothesdonotmakethemanunlesstheybeneatandclean。"

"Verytrue,"answeredPinocchio,"but,inordertogotoschool,Istillneedsomethingveryimportant。"

"Whatisit?"

"AnA-B-Cbook。"

"Tobesure!Buthowshallwegetit?"

"That’seasy。We’llgotoabookstoreandbuyit。"

"Andthemoney?"

"Ihavenone。"

"NeitherhaveI,"saidtheoldmansadly。

Pinocchio,althoughahappyboyalways,becamesadanddowncastatthesewords。Whenpovertyshowsitself,evenmischievousboysunderstandwhatitmeans。

"Whatdoesitmatter,afterall?"criedGeppettoallatonce,ashejumpedupfromhischair。Puttingonhisoldcoat,fullofdarnsandpatches,heranoutofthehousewithoutanotherword。

Afterawhilehereturned。InhishandshehadtheA-B-Cbookforhisson,buttheoldcoatwasgone。Thepoorfellowwasinhisshirtsleevesandthedaywascold。

"Where’syourcoat,Father?"

"Ihavesoldit。"

"Whydidyousellyourcoat?"

"Itwastoowarm。"

Pinocchiounderstoodtheanswerinatwinkling,and,unabletorestrainhistears,hejumpedonhisfather’sneckandkissedhimoverandover。

CHAPTER9

PinocchiosellshisA-B-CbooktopayhiswayintotheMarionetteTheaterSeePinocchiohurryingofftoschoolwithhisnewA-B-C

bookunderhisarm!Ashewalkedalong,hisbrainwasbusyplanninghundredsofwonderfulthings,buildinghundredsofcastlesintheair。Talkingtohimself,hesaid:

"Inschooltoday,I’lllearntoread,tomorrowtowrite,andthedayaftertomorrowI’lldoarithmetic。Then,cleverasIam,Icanearnalotofmoney。WiththeveryfirstpenniesImake,I’llbuyFatheranewclothcoat。Cloth,didIsay?No,itshallbeofgoldandsilverwithdiamondbuttons。Thatpoormancertainlydeservesit;for,afterall,isn’theinhisshirtsleevesbecausehewasgoodenoughtobuyabookforme?Onthiscoldday,too!Fathersareindeedgoodtotheirchildren!"

Ashetalkedtohimself,hethoughtheheardsoundsofpipesanddrumscomingfromadistance:pi-pi-pi,pi-pi-pi……zum,zum,zum,zum。

Hestoppedtolisten。Thosesoundscamefromalittlestreetthatledtoasmallvillagealongtheshore。

"Whatcanthatnoisebe?WhatanuisancethatIhavetogotoschool!Otherwise……"

Therehestopped,verymuchpuzzled。Hefelthehadtomakeuphismindforeitheronethingoranother。

Shouldhegotoschool,orshouldhefollowthepipes?

"TodayI’llfollowthepipes,andtomorrowI’llgotoschool。There’salwaysplentyoftimetogotoschool,"

decidedthelittlerascalatlast,shrugginghisshoulders。

Nosoonersaidthandone。Hestarteddownthestreet,goinglikethewind。Onheran,andloudergrewthesoundsofpipeanddrum:pi-pi-pi,pi-pi-pi,pi-pi-pi……zum,zum,zum,zum。

Suddenly,hefoundhimselfinalargesquare,fullofpeoplestandinginfrontofalittlewoodenbuildingpaintedinbrilliantcolors。

"Whatisthathouse?"Pinocchioaskedalittleboynearhim。

"Readthesignandyou’llknow。"

"I’dliketoread,butsomehowIcan’ttoday。"

"Oh,really?ThenI’llreadittoyou。Know,then,thatwritteninlettersoffireIseethewords:

GREATMARIONETTETHEATER。

"Whendidtheshowstart?"

"Itisstartingnow。"

"Andhowmuchdoesonepaytogetin?"

"Fourpennies。"

Pinocchio,whowaswildwithcuriositytoknowwhatwasgoingoninside,lostallhisprideandsaidtotheboyshamelessly:

"Willyougivemefourpenniesuntiltomorrow?"

"I’dgivethemtoyougladly,"answeredtheother,pokingfunathim,"butjustnowIcan’tgivethemtoyou。"

"Forthepriceoffourpennies,I’llsellyoumycoat。"

"Ifitrains,whatshallIdowithacoatoffloweredpaper?Icouldnottakeitoffagain。"

"Doyouwanttobuymyshoes?"

"Theyareonlygoodenoughtolightafirewith。"

"Whataboutmyhat?"

"Finebargain,indeed!Acapofdough!Themicemightcomeandeatitfrommyhead!"

Pinocchiowasalmostintears。Hewasjustabouttomakeonelastoffer,buthelackedthecouragetodoso。

Hehesitated,hewondered,hecouldnotmakeuphismind。

Atlasthesaid:

"Willyougivemefourpenniesforthebook?"

"IamaboyandIbuynothingfromboys,"saidthelittlefellowwithfarmorecommonsensethantheMarionette。

"I’llgiveyoufourpenniesforyourA-B-Cbook,"saidaragpickerwhostoodby。

Thenandthere,thebookchangedhands。AndtothinkthatpooroldGeppettosatathomeinhisshirtsleeves,shiveringwithcold,havingsoldhiscoattobuythatlittlebookforhisson!

CHAPTER10

TheMarionettesrecognizetheirbrotherPinocchio,andgreethimwithloudcheers;buttheDirector,FireEater,happensalongandpoorPinocchioalmostloseshislifeQuickasaflash,PinocchiodisappearedintotheMarionetteTheater。Andthensomethinghappenedwhichalmostcausedariot。

Thecurtainwasupandtheperformancehadstarted。

HarlequinandPulcinellawererecitingonthestageand,asusual,theywerethreateningeachotherwithsticksandblows。

Thetheaterwasfullofpeople,enjoyingthespectacleandlaughingtilltheycriedattheanticsofthetwoMarionettes。

Theplaycontinuedforafewminutes,andthensuddenly,withoutanywarning,Harlequinstoppedtalking。

Turningtowardtheaudience,hepointedtotherearoftheorchestra,yellingwildlyatthesametime:

"Look,look!AmIasleeporawake?OrdoIreallyseePinocchiothere?"

"Yes,yes!ItisPinocchio!"screamedPulcinella。

"Itis!Itis!"shriekedSignoraRosaura,peekinginfromthesideofthestage。

"ItisPinocchio!ItisPinocchio!"yelledalltheMarionettes,pouringoutofthewings。"ItisPinocchio。ItisourbrotherPinocchio!HurrahforPinocchio!"

"Pinocchio,comeuptome!"shoutedHarlequin。"Cometothearmsofyourwoodenbrothers!"

Atsuchalovinginvitation,Pinocchio,withoneleapfromthebackoftheorchestra,foundhimselfinthefrontrows。Withanotherleap,hewasontheorchestraleader’shead。Withathird,helandedonthestage。

Itisimpossibletodescribetheshrieksofjoy,thewarmembraces,theknocks,andthefriendlygreetingswithwhichthatstrangecompanyofdramaticactorsandactressesreceivedPinocchio。

Itwasaheart-rendingspectacle,buttheaudience,seeingthattheplayhadstopped,becameangryandbegantoyell:

"Theplay,theplay,wewanttheplay!"

Theyellingwasofnouse,fortheMarionettes,insteadofgoingonwiththeiract,madetwiceasmuchracketasbefore,and,liftingupPinocchioontheirshoulders,carriedhimaroundthestageintriumph。

Atthatverymoment,theDirectorcameoutofhisroom。Hehadsuchafearfulappearancethatonelookathimwouldfillyouwithhorror。Hisbeardwasasblackaspitch,andsolongthatitreachedfromhischindowntohisfeet。Hismouthwasaswideasanoven,histeethlikeyellowfangs,andhiseyes,twoglowingredcoals。Inhishuge,hairyhands,alongwhip,madeofgreensnakesandblackcats’tailstwistedtogether,swishedthroughtheairinadangerousway。

Attheunexpectedapparition,noonedaredeventobreathe。Onecouldalmosthearaflygoby。ThosepoorMarionettes,oneandall,trembledlikeleavesinastorm。

"Whyhaveyoubroughtsuchexcitementintomytheater;"thehugefellowaskedPinocchiowiththevoiceofanogresufferingwithacold。

"Believeme,yourHonor,thefaultwasnotmine。"

"Enough!Bequiet!I’lltakecareofyoulater。"

Assoonastheplaywasover,theDirectorwenttothekitchen,whereafinebiglambwasslowlyturningonthespit。Morewoodwasneededtofinishcookingit。

HecalledHarlequinandPulcinellaandsaidtothem:

"BringthatMarionettetome!Helooksasifheweremadeofwell-seasonedwood。He’llmakeafinefireforthisspit。"

HarlequinandPulcinellahesitatedabit。Then,frightenedbyalookfromtheirmaster,theyleftthekitchentoobeyhim。Afewminuteslatertheyreturned,carryingpoorPinocchio,whowaswrigglingandsquirminglikeaneelandcryingpitifully:

"Father,saveme!Idon’twanttodie!Idon’twanttodie!"

CHAPTER11

FireEatersneezesandforgivesPinocchio,whosaveshisfriend,Harlequin,fromdeathInthetheater,greatexcitementreigned。

FireEater(thiswasreallyhisname)wasveryugly,buthewasfarfrombeingasbadashelooked。Proofofthisisthat,whenhesawthepoorMarionettebeingbroughtintohim,strugglingwithfearandcrying,"I

don’twanttodie!Idon’twanttodie!"hefeltsorryforhimandbeganfirsttowaverandthentoweaken。Finally,hecouldcontrolhimselfnolongerandgavealoudsneeze。

Atthatsneeze,Harlequin,whountilthenhadbeenassadasaweepingwillow,smiledhappilyandleaningtowardtheMarionette,whisperedtohim:

"Goodnews,brothermine!FireEaterhassneezedandthisisasignthathefeelssorryforyou。

Youaresaved!"

Forbeitknown,that,whileotherpeople,whensadandsorrowful,weepandwipetheireyes,FireEater,ontheotherhand,hadthestrangehabitofsneezingeachtimehefeltunhappy。Thewaywasjustasgoodasanyothertoshowthekindnessofhisheart。

Aftersneezing,FireEater,uglyasever,criedtoPinocchio:

"Stopcrying!Yourwailsgivemeafunnyfeelingdownhereinmystomachand——E——tchee!——E——tchee!"

Twoloudsneezesfinishedhisspeech。

"Godblessyou!"saidPinocchio。

"Thanks!Areyourfatherandmotherstillliving?"

demandedFireEater。

"Myfather,yes。MymotherIhaveneverknown。"

"YourpoorfatherwouldsufferterriblyifIweretouseyouasfirewood。Pooroldman!Ifeelsorryforhim!E——tchee!E——tchee!E——tchee!"Threemoresneezessounded,louderthanever。

"Godblessyou!"saidPinocchio。

"Thanks!However,Ioughttobesorryformyself,too,justnow。Mygooddinnerisspoiled。Ihavenomorewoodforthefire,andthelambisonlyhalfcooked。

Nevermind!InyourplaceI’llburnsomeotherMarionette。

Heythere!Officers!"

Atthecall,twowoodenofficersappeared,longandthinasayardofrope,withqueerhatsontheirheadsandswordsintheirhands。

FireEateryelledattheminahoarsevoice:

"TakeHarlequin,tiehim,andthrowhimonthefire。

Iwantmylambwelldone!"

ThinkhowpoorHarlequinfelt!Hewassoscaredthathislegsdoubledupunderhimandhefelltothefloor。

Pinocchio,atthatheartbreakingsight,threwhimselfatthefeetofFireEaterand,weepingbitterly,askedinapitifulvoicewhichcouldscarcelybeheard:

"Havepity,Ibegofyou,signore!"

"Therearenosignorihere!"

"Havepity,kindsir!"

"Therearenosirshere!"

"Havepity,yourExcellency!"

OnhearinghimselfaddressedasyourExcellency,theDirectoroftheMarionetteTheatersatupverystraightinhischair,strokedhislongbeard,andbecomingsuddenlykindandcompassionate,smiledproudlyashesaidtoPinocchio:

"Well,whatdoyouwantfrommenow,Marionette?"

"Ibegformercyformypoorfriend,Harlequin,whohasneverdonetheleastharminhislife。"

"Thereisnomercyhere,Pinocchio。Ihavesparedyou。Harlequinmustburninyourplace。Iamhungryandmydinnermustbecooked。"

"Inthatcase,"saidPinocchioproudly,ashestoodupandflungawayhiscapofdough,"inthatcase,mydutyisclear。Come,officers!Tiemeupandthrowmeonthoseflames。No,itisnotfairforpoorHarlequin,thebestfriendthatIhaveintheworld,todieinmyplace!"

Thesebravewords,saidinapiercingvoice,madealltheotherMarionettescry。Eventheofficers,whoweremadeofwoodalso,criedliketwobabies。

FireEateratfirstremainedhardandcoldasapieceofice;butthen,littlebylittle,hesoftenedandbegantosneeze。Andafterfourorfivesneezes,heopenedwidehisarmsandsaidtoPinocchio:

"Youareabraveboy!Cometomyarmsandkissme!"

Pinocchiorantohimandscurryinglikeasquirrelupthelongblackbeard,hegaveFireEateralovingkissonthetipofhisnose。

"Haspardonbeengrantedtome?"askedpoorHarlequinwithavoicethatwashardlyabreath。

"Pardonisyours!"answeredFireEater;andsighingandwagginghishead,headded:"Well,tonightIshallhavetoeatmylambonlyhalfcooked,butbewarethenexttime,Marionettes。"

Atthenewsthatpardonhadbeengiven,theMarionettesrantothestageand,turningonallthelights,theydancedandsangtilldawn。

CHAPTER12

FireEatergivesPinocchiofivegoldpiecesforhisfather,Geppetto;

buttheMarionettemeetsaFoxandaCatandfollowsthemThenextdayFireEatercalledPinocchioasideandaskedhim:

"Whatisyourfather’sname?"

"Geppetto。"

"Andwhatishistrade?"

"He’sawoodcarver。"

"Doesheearnmuch?"

"Heearnssomuchthatheneverhasapennyinhispockets。Justthinkthat,inordertobuymeanA-B-C

bookforschool,hehadtoselltheonlycoatheowned,acoatsofullofdarnsandpatchesthatitwasapity。"

"Poorfellow!Ifeelsorryforhim。Here,takethesefivegoldpieces。Go,givethemtohimwithmykindestregards。"

Pinocchio,asmayeasilybeimagined,thankedhimathousandtimes。HekissedeachMarionetteinturn,eventheofficers,and,besidehimselfwithjoy,setoutonhishomewardjourney。

HehadgonebarelyhalfamilewhenhemetalameFoxandablindCat,walkingtogetherliketwogoodfriends。ThelameFoxleanedontheCat,andtheblindCatlettheFoxleadhimalong。

"Goodmorning,Pinocchio,"saidtheFox,greetinghimcourteously。

"Howdoyouknowmyname?"askedtheMarionette。

"Iknowyourfatherwell。"

"Wherehaveyouseenhim?"

"Isawhimyesterdaystandingatthedoorofhishouse。"

"Andwhatwashedoing?"

"Hewasinhisshirtsleevestremblingwithcold。"

"PoorFather!But,aftertoday,Godwilling,hewillsuffernolonger。"

"Why?"

"BecauseIhavebecomearichman。"

"You,arichman?"saidtheFox,andhebegantolaughoutloud。TheCatwaslaughingalso,buttriedtohideitbystrokinghislongwhiskers。

"Thereisnothingtolaughat,"criedPinocchioangrily。

"Iamverysorrytomakeyourmouthwater,butthese,asyouknow,arefivenewgoldpieces。"

AndhepulledoutthegoldpieceswhichFireEaterhadgivenhim。

Atthecheerfultinkleofthegold,theFoxunconsciouslyheldouthispawthatwassupposedtobelame,andtheCatopenedwidehistwoeyestilltheylookedlikelivecoals,butheclosedthemagainsoquicklythatPinocchiodidnotnotice。

"AndmayIask,"inquiredtheFox,"whatyouaregoingtodowithallthatmoney?"

"Firstofall,"answeredtheMarionette,"Iwanttobuyafinenewcoatformyfather,acoatofgoldandsilverwithdiamondbuttons;afterthat,I’llbuyanA-B-C

bookformyself。"

"Foryourself?"

"Formyself。Iwanttogotoschoolandstudyhard。"

"Lookatme,"saidtheFox。"Forthesillyreasonofwantingtostudy,Ihavelostapaw。"

"Lookatme,"saidtheCat。"Forthesamefoolishreason,Ihavelostthesightofbotheyes。"

Atthatmoment,aBlackbird,perchedonthefencealongtheroad,calledoutsharpandclear:

"Pinocchio,donotlistentobadadvice。Ifyoudo,you’llbesorry!"

PoorlittleBlackbird!Ifhehadonlykepthiswordstohimself!Inthetwinklingofaneyelid,theCatleapedonhim,andatehim,feathersandall。

Aftereatingthebird,hecleanedhiswhiskers,closedhiseyes,andbecameblindoncemore。

"PoorBlackbird!"saidPinocchiototheCat。

"Whydidyoukillhim?"

"Ikilledhimtoteachhimalesson。Hetalkstoomuch。

Nexttimehewillkeephiswordstohimself。"

Bythistimethethreecompanionshadwalkedalongdistance。Suddenly,theFoxstoppedinhistracksand,turningtotheMarionette,saidtohim:

"Doyouwanttodoubleyourgoldpieces?"

"Whatdoyoumean?"

"Doyouwantonehundred,athousand,twothousandgoldpiecesforyourmiserablefive?"

"Yes,buthow?"

"Thewayisveryeasy。Insteadofreturninghome,comewithus。"

"Andwherewillyoutakeme?"

"TotheCityofSimpleSimons。"

Pinocchiothoughtawhileandthensaidfirmly:

"No,Idon’twanttogo。Homeisnear,andI’mgoingwhereFatheriswaitingforme。HowunhappyhemustbethatIhavenotyetreturned!Ihavebeenabadson,andtheTalkingCricketwasrightwhenhesaidthatadisobedientboycannotbehappyinthisworld。Ihavelearnedthisatmyownexpense。Evenlastnightinthetheater,whenFireEater……Brrrr!!!!!……

Theshiversrunupanddownmybackatthemerethoughtofit。"

"Well,then,"saidtheFox,"ifyoureallywanttogohome,goahead,butyou’llbesorry。"

"You’llbesorry,"repeatedtheCat。

"Thinkwell,Pinocchio,youareturningyourbackonDameFortune。"

"OnDameFortune,"repeatedtheCat。

"Tomorrowyourfivegoldpieceswillbetwothousand!"

"Twothousand!"repeatedtheCat。

"Buthowcantheypossiblybecomesomany?"askedPinocchiowonderingly。

"I’llexplain,"saidtheFox。"Youmustknowthat,justoutsidetheCityofSimpleSimons,thereisablessedfieldcalledtheFieldofWonders。Inthisfieldyoudigaholeandintheholeyouburyagoldpiece。Aftercoveringuptheholewithearthyouwateritwell,sprinkleabitofsaltonit,andgotobed。Duringthenight,thegoldpiecesprouts,grows,blossoms,andnextmorningyoufindabeautifultree,thatisloadedwithgoldpieces。"

"SothatifIweretoburymyfivegoldpieces,"criedPinocchiowithgrowingwonder,"nextmorningIshouldfind——howmany?"

"Itisverysimpletofigureout,"answeredtheFox。

"Why,youcanfigureitonyourfingers!Grantedthateachpiecegivesyoufivehundred,multiplyfivehundredbyfive。Nextmorningyouwillfindtwenty-fivehundrednew,sparklinggoldpieces。"

"Fine!Fine!"criedPinocchio,dancingaboutwithjoy。

"AndassoonasIhavethem,IshallkeeptwothousandformyselfandtheotherfivehundredI’llgivetoyoutwo。"

"Agiftforus?"criedtheFox,pretendingtobeinsulted。

"Why,ofcoursenot!"

"Ofcoursenot!"repeatedtheCat。

"Wedonotworkforgain,"answeredtheFox。

"Weworkonlytoenrichothers。"

"Toenrichothers!"repeatedtheCat。

"Whatgoodpeople,"thoughtPinocchiotohimself。

Andforgettinghisfather,thenewcoat,theA-B-Cbook,andallhisgoodresolutions,hesaidtotheFoxandtotheCat:

"Letusgo。Iamwithyou。"

CHAPTER13

TheInnoftheRedLobsterCatandFoxandMarionettewalkedandwalkedandwalked。

Atlast,towardevening,deadtired,theycametotheInnoftheRedLobster。

"Letusstophereawhile,"saidtheFox,"toeatabiteandrestforafewhours。Atmidnightwe’llstartoutagain,foratdawntomorrowwemustbeattheFieldofWonders。"

TheywentintotheInnandallthreesatdownatthesametable。However,notoneofthemwasveryhungry。

ThepoorCatfeltveryweak,andhewasabletoeatonlythirty-fivemulletswithtomatosauceandfourportionsoftripewithcheese。Moreover,ashewassoinneedofstrength,hehadtohavefourmorehelpingsofbutterandcheese。

TheFox,afteragreatdealofcoaxing,triedhisbesttoeatalittle。Thedoctorhadputhimonadiet,andhehadtobesatisfiedwithasmallharedressedwithadozenyoungandtenderspringchickens。Afterthehare,heorderedsomepartridges,afewpheasants,acoupleofrabbits,andadozenfrogsandlizards。Thatwasall。

Hefeltill,hesaid,andcouldnoteatanotherbite。

Pinocchioateleastofall。Heaskedforabiteofbreadandafewnutsandthenhardlytouchedthem。Thepoorfellow,withhismindontheFieldofWonders,wassufferingfromagold-pieceindigestion。

Supperover,theFoxsaidtotheInnkeeper:

"Giveustwogoodrooms,oneforMr。Pinocchioandtheotherformeandmyfriend。Beforestartingout,we’lltakealittlenap。Remembertocallusatmidnightsharp,forwemustcontinueonourjourney。"

"Yes,sir,"answeredtheInnkeeper,winkinginaknowingwayattheFoxandtheCat,asiftosay,"Iunderstand。"

AssoonasPinocchiowasinbed,hefellfastasleepandbegantodream。Hedreamedhewasinthemiddleofafield。Thefieldwasfullofvinesheavywithgrapes。

Thegrapeswerenootherthangoldcoinswhichtinkledmerrilyastheyswayedinthewind。Theyseemedtosay,"Lethimwhowantsustakeus!"

JustasPinocchiostretchedouthishandtotakeahandfulofthem,hewasawakenedbythreeloudknocksatthedoor。ItwastheInnkeeperwhohadcometotellhimthatmidnighthadstruck。

"Aremyfriendsready?"theMarionetteaskedhim。

"Indeed,yes!Theywenttwohoursago。"

"Whyinsuchahurry?"

"UnfortunatelytheCatreceivedatelegramwhichsaidthathisfirst-bornwassufferingfromchilblainsandwasonthepointofdeath。Hecouldnotevenwaittosaygood-bytoyou。"

"Didtheypayforthesupper?"

"Howcouldtheydosuchathing?Beingpeopleofgreatrefinement,theydidnotwanttooffendyousodeeplyasnottoallowyouthehonorofpayingthebill。"

"Toobad!Thatoffensewouldhavebeenmorethanpleasingtome,"saidPinocchio,scratchinghishead。

"Wheredidmygoodfriendssaytheywouldwaitforme?"headded。

"AttheFieldofWonders,atsunrisetomorrowmorning。"

Pinocchiopaidagoldpieceforthethreesuppersandstartedonhiswaytowardthefieldthatwastomakehimarichman。

Hewalkedon,notknowingwherehewasgoing,foritwasdark,sodarkthatnotathingwasvisible。Roundabouthim,notaleafstirred。Afewbatsskimmedhisnosenowandagainandscaredhimhalftodeath。Onceortwiceheshouted,"Whogoesthere?"andthefar-awayhillsechoedbacktohim,"Whogoesthere?Whogoesthere?Whogoes……?"

Ashewalked,Pinocchionoticedatinyinsectglimmeringonthetrunkofatree,asmallbeingthatglowedwithapale,softlight。

"Whoareyou?"heasked。

"IamtheghostoftheTalkingCricket,"answeredthelittlebeinginafaintvoicethatsoundedasifitcamefromafar-awayworld。

"Whatdoyouwant?"askedtheMarionette。

"Iwanttogiveyouafewwordsofgoodadvice。

Returnhomeandgivethefourgoldpiecesyouhavelefttoyourpooroldfatherwhoisweepingbecausehehasnotseenyouformanyaday。"

"Tomorrowmyfatherwillbearichman,forthesefourgoldpieceswillbecometwothousand。"

"Don’tlistentothosewhopromiseyouwealthovernight,myboy。Asaruletheyareeitherfoolsorswindlers!

Listentomeandgohome。"

"ButIwanttogoon!"

"Thehourislate!"

"Iwanttogoon。"

"Thenightisverydark。"

"Iwanttogoon。"

"Theroadisdangerous。"

"Iwanttogoon。"

"Rememberthatboyswhoinsistonhavingtheirownway,soonerorlatercometogrief。"

"Thesamenonsense。Good-by,Cricket。"

"Goodnight,Pinocchio,andmayHeavenpreserveyoufromtheAssassins。"

TherewassilenceforaminuteandthelightoftheTalkingCricketdisappearedsuddenly,justasifsomeonehadsnuffeditout。Onceagaintheroadwasplungedindarkness。

CHAPTER14

Pinocchio,nothavinglistenedtothegoodadviceoftheTalkingCricket,fallsintothehandsoftheAssassins"Dear,oh,dear!WhenIcometothinkofit,"saidtheMarionettetohimself,asheoncemoresetoutonhisjourney,"weboysarereallyveryunlucky。Everybodyscoldsus,everybodygivesusadvice,everybodywarnsus。

Ifweweretoallowit,everyonewouldtrytobefatherandmothertous;everyone,eventheTalkingCricket。

Takeme,forexample。JustbecauseIwouldnotlistentothatbothersomeCricket,whoknowshowmanymisfortunesmaybeawaitingme!Assassinsindeed!AtleastIhaveneverbelievedinthem,noreverwill。Tospeaksensibly,Ithinkassassinshavebeeninventedbyfathersandmotherstofrightenchildrenwhowanttorunawayatnight。Andthen,evenifIweretomeetthemontheroad,whatmatter?I’lljustrunuptothem,andsay,`Well,signori,whatdoyouwant?Rememberthatyoucan’tfoolwithme!Runalongandmindyourbusiness。’

Atsuchaspeech,Icanalmostseethosepoorfellowsrunninglikethewind。Butincasetheydon’trunaway,Icanalwaysrunmyself……"

Pinocchiowasnotgiventimetoargueanylonger,forhethoughtheheardaslightrustleamongtheleavesbehindhim。

Heturnedtolookandbehold,thereinthedarknessstoodtwobigblackshadows,wrappedfromheadtofootinblacksacks。Thetwofiguresleapedtowardhimassoftlyasiftheywereghosts。

"Heretheycome!"Pinocchiosaidtohimself,and,notknowingwheretohidethegoldpieces,hestuckallfourofthemunderhistongue。

Hetriedtorunaway,buthardlyhadhetakenastep,whenhefelthisarmsgraspedandheardtwohorrible,deepvoicessaytohim:"Yourmoneyoryourlife!"

Onaccountofthegoldpiecesinhismouth,Pinocchiocouldnotsayaword,sohetriedwithheadandhandsandbodytoshow,asbesthecould,thathewasonlyapoorMarionettewithoutapennyinhispocket。

"Come,come,lessnonsense,andoutwithyourmoney!"

criedthetwothievesinthreateningvoices。

Oncemore,Pinocchio’sheadandhandssaid,"Ihaven’tapenny。"

"Outwiththatmoneyoryou’readeadman,"saidthetallerofthetwoAssassins。

"Deadman,"repeatedtheother。

"Andafterhavingkilledyou,wewillkillyourfatheralso。"

"Yourfatheralso!"

"No,no,no,notmyFather!"criedPinocchio,wildwithterror;

butashescreamed,thegoldpiecestinkledtogetherinhismouth。

"Ah,yourascal!Sothat’sthegame!Youhavethemoneyhiddenunderyourtongue。Outwithit!"

ButPinocchiowasasstubbornasever。

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