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The Adventures of Pinocchio
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第3章
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"Goodman,willyoubekindenoughtogiveapennytoapoorboywhoisyawningfromhunger?"

"Gladly,"answeredtheBricklayer。"Comewithmeandcarrysomeplaster,andinsteadofonepenny,I’llgiveyoufive。"

"Buttheplasterisheavy,"answeredPinocchio,"andtheworktoohardforme。"

"Iftheworkistoohardforyou,myboy,enjoyyouryawnsandmaytheybringyouluck!"

Inlessthanahalfhour,atleasttwentypeoplepassedandPinocchiobeggedofeachone,buttheyallanswered:

"Aren’tyouashamed?Insteadofbeingabeggarinthestreets,whydon’tyoulookforworkandearnyourownbread?"

Finallyalittlewomanwentbycarryingtwowaterjugs。

"Goodwoman,willyouallowmetohaveadrinkfromoneofyourjugs?"askedPinocchio,whowasburningupwiththirst。

"Withpleasure,myboy!"sheanswered,settingthetwojugsonthegroundbeforehim。

WhenPinocchiohadhadhisfill,hegrumbled,ashewipedhismouth:

"Mythirstisgone。IfIcouldonlyaseasilygetridofmyhunger!"

Onhearingthesewords,thegoodlittlewomanimmediatelysaid:

"Ifyouhelpmetocarrythesejugshome,I’llgiveyouasliceofbread。"

Pinocchiolookedatthejugandsaidneitheryesnorno。

"Andwiththebread,I’llgiveyouanicedishofcauliflowerwithwhitesauceonit。"

Pinocchiogavethejuganotherlookandsaidneitheryesnorno。

"Andafterthecauliflower,somecakeandjam。"

Atthislastbribery,Pinocchiocouldnolongerresistandsaidfirmly:

"Verywell。I’lltakethejughomeforyou。"

Thejugwasveryheavy,andtheMarionette,notbeingstrongenoughtocarryitwithhishands,hadtoputitonhishead。

Whentheyarrivedhome,thelittlewomanmadePinocchiositdownatasmalltableandplacedbeforehimthebread,thecauliflower,andthecake。Pinocchiodidnoteat;

hedevoured。Hisstomachseemedabottomlesspit。

Hishungerfinallyappeased,heraisedhisheadtothankhiskindbenefactress。Buthehadnotlookedatherlongwhenhegaveacryofsurpriseandsattherewithhiseyeswideopen,hisforkintheair,andhismouthfilledwithbreadandcauliflower。

"Whyallthissurprise?"askedthegoodwoman,laughing。

"Because——"answeredPinocchio,stammeringandstuttering,"because——youlooklike——youremindmeof——yes,yes,thesamevoice,thesameeyes,thesamehair——yes,yes,yes,youalsohavethesameazurehairshehad——Oh,mylittleFairy,mylittleFairy!Tellmethatitisyou!

Don’tmakemecryanylonger!Ifyouonlyknew!Ihavecriedsomuch,Ihavesufferedso!"

AndPinocchiothrewhimselfonthefloorandclaspedthekneesofthemysteriouslittlewoman。

CHAPTER25

PinocchiopromisestheFairytobegoodandtostudy,asheisgrowingtiredofbeingaMarionette,andwishestobecomearealboyIfPinocchiocriedmuchlonger,thelittlewomanthoughthewouldmeltaway,soshefinallyadmittedthatshewasthelittleFairywithAzureHair。

"YourascalofaMarionette!HowdidyouknowitwasI?"

sheasked,laughing。

"Myloveforyoutoldmewhoyouwere。"

"Doyouremember?YouleftmewhenIwasalittlegirlandnowyoufindmeagrownwoman。Iamsoold,Icouldalmostbeyourmother!"

"Iamverygladofthat,forthenIcancallyoumotherinsteadofsister。ForalongtimeIhavewantedamother,justlikeotherboys。Buthowdidyougrowsoquickly?"

"That’sasecret!"

"Tellittome。Ialsowanttogrowalittle。Lookatme!

Ihavenevergrownhigherthanapenny’sworthofcheese。"

"Butyoucan’tgrow,"answeredtheFairy。

"Whynot?"

"BecauseMarionettesnevergrow。TheyarebornMarionettes,theyliveMarionettes,andtheydieMarionettes。"

"Oh,I’mtiredofalwaysbeingaMarionette!"criedPinocchiodisgustedly。

"It’sabouttimeformetogrowintoamanaseveryoneelsedoes。"

"Andyouwillifyoudeserveit——"

"Really?WhatcanIdotodeserveit?"

"It’saverysimplematter。Trytoactlikeawell-behavedchild。"

"Don’tyouthinkIdo?"

"Farfromit!Goodboysareobedient,andyou,onthecontrary——"

"AndIneverobey。"

"Goodboyslovestudyandwork,butyou——"

"AndI,onthecontrary,amalazyfellowandatrampallyearround。"

"Goodboysalwaystellthetruth。"

"AndIalwaystelllies。"

"Goodboysgogladlytoschool。"

"AndIgetsickifIgotoschool。FromnowonI’llbedifferent。"

"Doyoupromise?"

"Ipromise。Iwanttobecomeagoodboyandbeacomforttomyfather。

Whereismypoorfathernow?"

"Idonotknow。"

"WillIeverbeluckyenoughtofindhimandembracehimoncemore?"

"Ithinkso。Indeed,Iamsureofit。"

Atthisanswer,Pinocchio’shappinesswasverygreat。

HegraspedtheFairy’shandsandkissedthemsohardthatitlookedasifhehadlosthishead。Thenliftinghisface,helookedatherlovinglyandasked:"Tellme,littleMother,itisn’ttruethatyouaredead,isit?"

"Itdoesn’tseemso,"answeredtheFairy,smiling。

"IfyouonlyknewhowIsufferedandhowIweptwhenIread`Herelies——’"

"Iknowit,andforthatIhaveforgivenyou。Thedepthofyoursorrowmademeseethatyouhaveakindheart。

Thereisalwayshopeforboyswithheartssuchasyours,thoughtheymayoftenbeverymischievous。ThisisthereasonwhyIhavecomesofartolookforyou。Fromnowon,I’llbeyourownlittlemother。"

"Oh!Howlovely!"criedPinocchio,jumpingwithjoy。

"YouwillobeymealwaysanddoasIwish?"

"Gladly,verygladly,morethangladly!"

"Beginningtomorrow,"saidtheFairy,"you’llgotoschooleveryday。"

Pinocchio’sfacefellalittle。

"Thenyouwillchoosethetradeyoulikebest。"

Pinocchiobecamemoreserious。

"Whatareyoumumblingtoyourself?"askedtheFairy。

"Iwasjustsaying,"whinedtheMarionetteinawhisper,"thatitseemstoolateformetogotoschoolnow。"

"No,indeed。Rememberitisnevertoolatetolearn。"

"ButIdon’twanteithertradeorprofession。"

"Why?"

"Becauseworkweariesme!"

"Mydearboy,"saidtheFairy,"peoplewhospeakasyoudousuallyendtheirdayseitherinaprisonorinahospital。Aman,remember,whetherrichorpoor,shoulddosomethinginthisworld。Noonecanfindhappinesswithoutwork。Woebetidethelazyfellow!Lazinessisaseriousillnessandonemustcureitimmediately;yes,evenfromearlychildhood。Ifnot,itwillkillyouintheend。"

ThesewordstouchedPinocchio’sheart。HeliftedhiseyestohisFairyandsaidseriously:

"I’llwork;I’llstudy;I’lldoallyoutellme。

Afterall,thelifeofaMarionettehasgrownverytiresometomeandIwanttobecomeaboy,nomatterhowharditis。

Youpromisethat,doyounot?"

"Yes,Ipromise,andnowitisuptoyou。"

CHAPTER26

PinocchiogoestotheseashorewithhisfriendstoseetheTerribleSharkInthemorning,brightandearly,Pinocchiostartedforschool。

ImaginewhattheboyssaidwhentheysawaMarionetteentertheclassroom!Theylaugheduntiltheycried。Everyoneplayedtricksonhim。Onepulledhishatoff,anothertuggedathiscoat,athirdtriedtopaintamustacheunderhisnose。Oneevenattemptedtotiestringstohisfeetandhishandstomakehimdance。

ForawhilePinocchiowasverycalmandquiet。Finally,however,helostallpatienceandturningtohistormentors,hesaidtothemthreateningly:

"Careful,boys,Ihaven’tcomeheretobemadefunof。

I’llrespectyouandIwantyoutorespectme。"

"HurrahforDr。Know-all!Youhavespokenlikeaprintedbook!"howledtheboys,burstingwithlaughter。

Oneofthem,moreimpudentthantherest,putouthishandtopulltheMarionette’snose。

Buthewasnotquickenough,forPinocchiostretchedhislegunderthetableandkickedhimhardontheshin。

"Oh,whathardfeet!"criedtheboy,rubbingthespotwheretheMarionettehadkickedhim。

"Andwhatelbows!Theyareevenharderthanthefeet!"

shoutedanotherone,who,becauseofsomeothertrick,hadreceivedablowinthestomach。

WiththatkickandthatblowPinocchiogainedeverybody’sfavor。

Everyoneadmiredhim,dancedattendanceuponhim,pettedandcaressedhim。

Asthedayspassedintoweeks,eventheteacherpraisedhim,forhesawhimattentive,hardworking,andwideawake,alwaysthefirsttocomeinthemorning,andthelasttoleavewhenschoolwasover。

Pinocchio’sonlyfaultwasthathehadtoomanyfriends。

Amongtheseweremanywell-knownrascals,whocarednotajotforstudyorforsuccess。

Theteacherwarnedhimeachday,andeventhegoodFairyrepeatedtohimmanytimes:

"Takecare,Pinocchio!Thosebadcompanionswillsoonerorlatermakeyouloseyourloveforstudy。

Somedaytheywillleadyouastray。"

"There’snosuchdanger,"answeredtheMarionette,shrugginghisshouldersandpointingtohisforeheadasiftosay,"I’mtoowise。"

Soithappenedthatoneday,ashewaswalkingtoschool,hemetsomeboyswhoranuptohimandsaid:

"Haveyouheardthenews?"

"No!"

"ASharkasbigasamountainhasbeenseenneartheshore。"

"Really?IwonderifitcouldbethesameoneIheardofwhenmyfatherwasdrowned?"

"Wearegoingtoseeit。Areyoucoming?"

"No,notI。Imustgotoschool。"

"Whatdoyoucareaboutschool?Youcangotheretomorrow。

Withalessonmoreorless,wearealwaysthesamedonkeys。"

"Andwhatwilltheteachersay?"

"Lethimtalk。Heispaidtogrumblealldaylong。"

"Andmymother?"

"Mothersdon’tknowanything,"answeredthosescamps。

"DoyouknowwhatI’lldo?"saidPinocchio。

"Forcertainreasonsofmine,I,too,wanttoseethatShark;

butI’llgoafterschool。Icanseehimthenaswellasnow。"

"Poorsimpleton!"criedoneoftheboys。"Doyouthinkthatafishofthatsizewillstandtherewaitingforyou?

Heturnsandoffhegoes,andnoonewilleverbethewiser。"

"Howlongdoesittakefromheretotheshore?"askedtheMarionette。

"Onehourthereandback。"

"Verywell,then。Let’sseewhogetstherefirst!"criedPinocchio。

Atthesignal,thelittletroop,withbooksundertheirarms,dashedacrossthefields。Pinocchioledtheway,runningasifonwings,theothersfollowingasfastastheycould。

Nowandagain,helookedbackand,seeinghisfollowershotandtired,andwithtongueshangingout,helaughedoutheartily。Unhappyboy!Ifhehadonlyknownthenthedreadfulthingsthatweretohappentohimonaccountofhisdisobedience!

CHAPTER27

ThegreatbattlebetweenPinocchioandhisplaymates。

Oneiswounded。PinocchioisarrestedGoinglikethewind,Pinocchiotookbutaveryshorttimetoreachtheshore。Heglancedallabouthim,buttherewasnosignofaShark。Theseawasassmoothasglass。

"Heythere,boys!Where’sthatShark?"heasked,turningtohisplaymates。

"Hemayhavegoneforhisbreakfast,"saidoneofthem,laughing。

"Or,perhaps,hewenttobedforalittlenap,"

saidanother,laughingalso。

Fromtheanswersandthelaughterwhichfollowedthem,Pinocchiounderstoodthattheboyshadplayedatrickonhim。

"Whatnow?"hesaidangrilytothem。"What’sthejoke?"

"Oh,thejoke’sonyou!"criedhistormentors,laughingmoreheartilythanever,anddancinggaylyaroundtheMarionette。

"Andthatis——?"

"Thatwehavemadeyoustayoutofschooltocomewithus。Aren’tyouashamedofbeingsuchagoody-goody,andofstudyingsohard?Youneverhaveabitofenjoyment。"

"Andwhatisittoyou,ifIdostudy?"

"Whatdoestheteacherthinkofus,youmean?"

"Why?"

"Don’tyousee?Ifyoustudyandwedon’t,wepayforit。Afterall,it’sonlyfairtolookoutforourselves。"

"Whatdoyouwantmetodo?"

"Hateschoolandbooksandteachers,aswealldo。Theyareyourworstenemies,youknow,andtheyliketomakeyouasunhappyastheycan。"

"AndifIgoonstudying,whatwillyoudotome?"

"You’llpayforit!"

"Really,youamuseme,"answeredtheMarionette,noddinghishead。

"Hey,Pinocchio,"criedthetallestofthemall,"thatwilldo。

Wearetiredofhearingyoubraggingaboutyourself,youlittleturkeycock!Youmaynotbeafraidofus,butrememberwearenotafraidofyou,either!

Youarealone,youknow,andweareseven。"

"Likethesevensins,"saidPinocchio,stilllaughing。

"Didyouhearthat?Hehasinsultedusall。Hehascalledussins。"

"Pinocchio,apologizeforthat,orlookout!"

"Cuck——oo!"saidtheMarionette,mockingthemwithhisthumbtohisnose。

"You’llbesorry!"

"Cuck——oo!"

"We’llwhipyousoundly!"

"Cuck——oo!"

"You’llgohomewithabrokennose!"

"Cuck——oo!"

"Verywell,then!Takethat,andkeepitforyoursupper,"

calledouttheboldestofhistormentors。

Andwiththewords,hegavePinocchioaterribleblowonthehead。

Pinocchioansweredwithanotherblow,andthatwasthesignalforthebeginningofthefray。Inafewmoments,thefightragedhotandheavyonbothsides。

Pinocchio,althoughalone,defendedhimselfbravely。

Withthosetwowoodenfeetofhis,heworkedsofastthathisopponentskeptatarespectfuldistance。

Wherevertheylanded,theylefttheirpainfulmarkandtheboyscouldonlyrunawayandhowl。

EnragedatnotbeingabletofighttheMarionetteatclosequarters,theystartedtothrowallkindsofbooksathim。

Readers,geographies,histories,grammarsflewinalldirections。

ButPinocchiowaskeenofeyeandswiftofmovement,andthebooksonlypassedoverhishead,landedinthesea,anddisappeared。

Thefish,thinkingtheymightbegoodtoeat,cametothetopofthewateringreatnumbers。Sometookanibble,sometookabite,butnosoonerhadtheytastedapageortwo,thantheyspatthemoutwithawryface,asiftosay:

"Whatahorridtaste!Ourownfoodissomuchbetter!"

Meanwhile,thebattlewaxedmoreandmorefurious。

Atthenoise,alargeCrabcrawledslowlyoutofthewaterand,withavoicethatsoundedlikeatrombonesufferingfromacold,hecriedout:

"Stopfighting,yourascals!Thesebattlesbetweenboysrarelyendwell。Troubleissuretocometoyou!"

PoorCrab!Hemightaswellhavespokentothewind。

Insteadoflisteningtohisgoodadvice,Pinocchioturnedtohimandsaidasroughlyasheknewhow:

"Keepquiet,uglyGab!Itwouldbebetterforyoutochewafewcoughdropstogetridofthatcoldyouhave。

Gotobedandsleep!Youwillfeelbetterinthemorning。"

Inthemeantime,theboys,havingusedalltheirbooks,lookedaroundfornewammunition。SeeingPinocchio’sbundlelyingidlenear-by,theysomehowmanagedtogetholdofit。

Oneofthebookswasaverylargevolume,anarithmetictext,heavilyboundinleather。ItwasPinocchio’spride。

Amongallhisbooks,helikedthatonethebest。

Thinkingitwouldmakeafinemissile,oneoftheboystookholdofitandthrewitwithallhisstrengthatPinocchio’shead。

ButinsteadofhittingtheMarionette,thebookstruckoneoftheotherboys,who,aspaleasaghost,criedoutfaintly:

"Oh,Mother,help!I’mdying!"andfellsenselesstotheground。

Atthesightofthatpalelittlecorpse,theboysweresofrightenedthattheyturnedtailandran。Inafewmoments,allhaddisappeared。

AllexceptPinocchio。Althoughscaredtodeathbythehorrorofwhathadbeendone,herantotheseaandsoakedhishandkerchiefinthecoolwaterandwithitbathedtheheadofhispoorlittleschoolmate。Sobbingbitterly,hecalledtohim,saying:

"Eugene!MypoorEugene!Openyoureyesandlookatme!

Whydon’tyouanswer?Iwasnottheonewhohityou,youknow。Believeme,Ididn’tdoit。Openyoureyes,Eugene?Ifyoukeepthemshut,I’lldie,too。Oh,dearme,howshallIevergohomenow?HowshallIeverlookatmylittlemotheragain?Whatwillhappentome?WhereshallIgo?WhereshallIhide?Oh,howmuchbetteritwouldhavebeen,athousandtimesbetter,ifonlyIhadgonetoschool!WhydidIlistentothoseboys?Theyalwayswereabadinfluence!Andtothinkthattheteacherhadtoldme——andmymother,too!——`Bewareofbadcompany!’That’swhatshesaid。ButI’mstubbornandproud。Ilisten,butalwaysIdoasIwish。AndthenIpay。

I’veneverhadamoment’speacesinceI’vebeenborn!Oh,dear!Whatwillbecomeofme?Whatwillbecomeofme?"

Pinocchiowentoncryingandmoaningandbeatinghishead。Againandagainhecalledtohislittlefriend,whensuddenlyheheardheavystepsapproaching。

HelookedupandsawtwotallCarabineersnearhim。

"Whatareyoudoingstretchedoutontheground?"

theyaskedPinocchio。

"I’mhelpingthisschoolfellowofmine。"

"Hashefainted?"

"Ishouldsayso,"saidoneoftheCarabineers,bendingtolookatEugene。"Thisboyhasbeenwoundedonthetemple。Whohashurthim?"

"NotI,"stammeredtheMarionette,whohadhardlyabreathleftinhiswholebody。

"Ifitwasn’tyou,whowasit,then?"

"NotI,"repeatedPinocchio。

"Andwithwhatwashewounded?"

"Withthisbook,"andtheMarionettepickedupthearithmetictexttoshowittotheofficer。

"Andwhosebookisthis?"

"Mine。"

"Enough。"

"Notanotherword!Getupasquicklyasyoucanandcomealongwithus。"

"ButI——"

"Comewithus!"

"ButIaminnocent。"

"Comewithus!"

Beforestartingout,theofficerscalledouttoseveralfishermenpassingbyinaboatandsaidtothem:

"Takecareofthislittlefellowwhohasbeenhurt。

Takehimhomeandbindhiswounds。Tomorrowwe’llcomeafterhim。"

TheythentookholdofPinocchioand,puttinghimbetweenthem,saidtohiminaroughvoice:"March!

Andgoquickly,oritwillbetheworseforyou!"

Theydidnothavetorepeattheirwords。TheMarionettewalkedswiftlyalongtheroadtothevillage。Butthepoorfellowhardlyknewwhathewasabout。Hethoughthehadanightmare。Hefeltill。Hiseyessaweverythingdouble,hislegstrembled,histonguewasdry,and,tryashemight,hecouldnotutterasingleword。Yet,inspiteofthisnumbnessoffeeling,hesufferedkeenlyatthethoughtofpassingunderthewindowsofhisgoodlittleFairy’shouse。WhatwouldshesayonseeinghimbetweentwoCarabineers?

Theyhadjustreachedthevillage,whenasuddengustofwindblewoffPinocchio’scapandmadeitgosailingfardownthestreet。

"Wouldyouallowme,"theMarionetteaskedtheCarabineers,"torunaftermycap?"

"Verywell,go;buthurry。"

TheMarionettewent,pickeduphiscap——butinsteadofputtingitonhishead,hestuckitbetweenhisteethandthenracedtowardthesea。

Hewentlikeabulletoutofagun。

TheCarabineers,judgingthatitwouldbeverydifficulttocatchhim,sentalargeMastiffafterhim,onethathadwonfirstprizeinallthedograces。PinocchioranfastandtheDogranfaster。Atsomuchnoise,thepeoplehungoutofthewindowsorgatheredinthestreet,anxioustoseetheendofthecontest。Buttheyweredisappointed,fortheDogandPinocchioraisedsomuchdustontheroadthat,afterafewmoments,itwasimpossibletoseethem。

CHAPTER28

PinocchiorunsthedangerofbeingfriedinapanlikeafishDuringthatwildchase,Pinocchiolivedthroughaterriblemomentwhenhealmostgavehimselfupaslost。

ThiswaswhenAlidoro(thatwastheMastiff’sname),inafrenzyofrunning,camesonearthathewasontheverypointofreachinghim。

TheMarionetteheard,closebehindhim,thelaboredbreathingofthebeastwhowasfastonhistrail,andnowandagainevenfelthishotbreathblowoverhim。

Luckily,bythistime,hewasveryneartheshore,andtheseawasinsight;infact,onlyafewshortstepsaway。

Assoonashesetfootonthebeach,Pinocchiogavealeapandfellintothewater。Alidorotriedtostop,butashewasrunningveryfast,hecouldn’t,andhe,too,landedfaroutinthesea。Strangethoughitmayseem,theDogcouldnotswim。Hebeatthewaterwithhispawstoholdhimselfup,buttheharderhetried,thedeeperhesank。

Ashestuckhisheadoutoncemore,thepoorfellow’seyeswerebulgingandhebarkedoutwildly,"Idrown!Idrown!"

"Drown!"answeredPinocchiofromafar,happyathisescape。

"Help,Pinocchio,dearlittlePinocchio!Savemefromdeath!"

Atthosecriesofsuffering,theMarionette,whoafterallhadaverykindheart,wasmovedtocompassion。

Heturnedtowardthepooranimalandsaidtohim:

"ButifIhelpyou,willyoupromisenottobothermeagainbyrunningafterme?"

"Ipromise!Ipromise!Onlyhurry,forifyouwaitanothersecond,I’llbedeadandgone!"

Pinocchiohesitatedstillanotherminute。Then,rememberinghowhisfatherhadoftentoldhimthatakinddeedisneverlost,heswamtoAlidoroand,catchingholdofhistail,draggedhimtotheshore。

ThepoorDogwassoweakhecouldnotstand。Hehadswallowedsomuchsaltwaterthathewasswollenlikeaballoon。However,Pinocchio,notwishingtotrusthimtoomuch,threwhimselfonceagainintothesea。Asheswamaway,hecalledout:

"Good-by,Alidoro,goodluckandremembermetothefamily!"

"Good-by,littlePinocchio,"answeredtheDog。

"Athousandthanksforhavingsavedmefromdeath。

Youdidmeagoodturn,and,inthisworld,whatisgivenisalwaysreturned。Ifthechancecomes,Ishallbethere。"

Pinocchiowentonswimmingclosetoshore。Atlasthethoughthehadreachedasafeplace。Glancingupanddownthebeach,hesawtheopeningofacaveoutofwhichroseaspiralofsmoke。

"Inthatcave,"hesaidtohimself,"theremustbeafire。

Somuchthebetter。I’lldrymyclothesandwarmmyself,andthen——well——"

Hismindmadeup,Pinocchioswamtotherocks,butashestartedtoclimb,hefeltsomethingunderhimliftinghimuphigherandhigher。Hetriedtoescape,buthewastoolate。Tohisgreatsurprise,hefoundhimselfinahugenet,amidacrowdoffishofallkindsandsizes,whowerefightingandstrugglingdesperatelytofreethemselves。

Atthesametime,hesawaFishermancomeoutofthecave,aFishermansouglythatPinocchiothoughthewasaseamonster。Inplaceofhair,hisheadwascoveredbyathickbushofgreengrass。Greenwastheskinofhisbody,greenwerehiseyes,greenwasthelong,longbeardthatreacheddowntohisfeet。Helookedlikeagiantlizardwithlegsandarms。

WhentheFishermanpulledthenetoutofthesea,hecriedoutjoyfully:

"BlessedProvidence!OncemoreI’llhaveafinemealoffish!"

"ThankHeaven,I’mnotafish!"saidPinocchiotohimself,tryingwiththesewordstofindalittlecourage。

TheFishermantookthenetandthefishtothecave,adark,gloomy,smokyplace。Inthemiddleofit,apanfullofoilsizzledoverasmokyfire,sendingoutarepellingodoroftallowthattookawayone’sbreath。

"Now,let’sseewhatkindoffishwehavecaughttoday,"saidtheGreenFisherman。Heputahandasbigasaspadeintothenetandpulledoutahandfulofmullets。

"Finemullets,these!"hesaid,afterlookingatthemandsmellingthemwithpleasure。Afterthat,hethrewthemintoalarge,emptytub。

Manytimesherepeatedthisperformance。Ashepulledeachfishoutofthenet,hismouthwateredwiththethoughtofthegooddinnercoming,andhesaid:

"Finefish,thesebass!"

"Verytasty,thesewhitefish!"

"Deliciousflounders,these!"

"Whatsplendidcrabs!"

"Andthesedearlittleanchovies,withtheirheadsstillon!"

Asyoucanwellimagine,thebass,theflounders,thewhitefish,andeventhelittleanchoviesallwenttogetherintothetubtokeepthemulletscompany。ThelasttocomeoutofthenetwasPinocchio。

AssoonastheFishermanpulledhimout,hisgreeneyesopenedwidewithsurprise,andhecriedoutinfear:

"Whatkindoffishisthis?Idon’trememberevereatinganythinglikeit。"

Helookedathimcloselyandafterturninghimoverandover,hesaidatlast:

"Iunderstand。Hemustbeacrab!"

Pinocchio,mortifiedatbeingtakenforacrab,saidresentfully:

"Whatnonsense!Acrabindeed!Iamnosuchthing。

Bewarehowyoudealwithme!IamaMarionette,Iwantyoutoknow。"

"AMarionette?"askedtheFisherman。"ImustadmitthataMarionettefishis,forme,anentirelynewkindoffish。

Somuchthebetter。I’lleatyouwithgreaterrelish。"

"Eatme?Butcan’tyouunderstandthatI’mnotafish?

Can’tyouhearthatIspeakandthinkasyoudo?"

"It’strue,"answeredtheFisherman;"butsinceIseethatyouareafish,wellabletotalkandthinkasIdo,I’lltreatyouwithallduerespect。"

"Andthatis——"

"That,asasignofmyparticularesteem,I’llleavetoyouthechoiceofthemannerinwhichyouaretobecooked。Doyouwishtobefriedinapan,ordoyouprefertobecookedwithtomatosauce?"

"Totellyouthetruth,"answeredPinocchio,"ifImustchoose,IshouldmuchrathergofreesoImayreturnhome!"

"Areyoufooling?DoyouthinkthatIwanttolosetheopportunitytotastesuchararefish?AMarionettefishdoesnotcomeveryoftentotheseseas。Leaveittome。

I’llfryyouinthepanwiththeothers。Iknowyou’lllikeit。

It’salwaysacomforttofindoneselfingoodcompany。"

TheunluckyMarionette,hearingthis,begantocryandwailandbeg。Withtearsstreamingdownhischeeks,hesaid:

"Howmuchbetteritwouldhavebeenformetogotoschool!

IdidlistentomyplaymatesandnowIampayingforit!

Oh!Oh!Oh!"

Andashestruggledandsquirmedlikeaneeltoescapefromhim,theGreenFishermantookastoutcordandtiedhimhandandfoot,andthrewhimintothebottomofthetubwiththeothers。

Thenhepulledawoodenbowlfullofflouroutofacupboardandstartedtorollthefishintoit,onebyone。

Whentheywerewhitewithit,hethrewthemintothepan。

Thefirsttodanceinthehotoilwerethemullets,thebassfollowed,thenthewhitefish,theflounders,andtheanchovies。Pinocchio’sturncamelast。Seeinghimselfsoneartodeath(andsuchahorribledeath!)hebegantotremblesowithfrightthathehadnovoiceleftwithwhichtobegforhislife。

Thepoorboybeseechedonlywithhiseyes。ButtheGreenFisherman,notevennoticingthatitwashe,turnedhimoverandoverintheflouruntilhelookedlikeaMarionettemadeofchalk。

Thenhetookhimbytheheadand——

CHAPTER29

PinocchioreturnstotheFairy’shouseandshepromiseshimthat,onthemorrow,hewillceasetobeaMarionetteandbecomeaboy。

Awonderfulpartyofcoffee-and-milktocelebratethegreateventMindfulofwhattheFishermanhadsaid,Pinocchioknewthatallhopeofbeingsavedhadgone。Heclosedhiseyesandwaitedforthefinalmoment。

Suddenly,alargeDog,attractedbytheodoroftheboilingoil,camerunningintothecave。

"Getout!"criedtheFishermanthreateninglyandstillholdingontotheMarionette,whowasallcoveredwithflour。

ButthepoorDogwasveryhungry,andwhiningandwagginghistail,hetriedtosay:

"GivemeabiteofthefishandI’llgoinpeace。"

"Getout,Isay!"repeatedtheFisherman。

AndhedrewbackhisfoottogivetheDogakick。

ThentheDog,who,beingreallyhungry,wouldtakenorefusal,turnedinaragetowardtheFishermanandbaredhisterriblefangs。Andatthatmoment,apitifullittlevoicewasheardsaying:"Saveme,Alidoro;ifyoudon’t,Ifry!"

TheDogimmediatelyrecognizedPinocchio’svoice。

Greatwashissurprisetofindthatthevoicecamefromthelittleflour-coveredbundlethattheFishermanheldinhishand。

Thenwhatdidhedo?Withonegreatleap,hegraspedthatbundleinhismouthand,holdingitlightlybetweenhisteeth,ranthroughthedooranddisappearedlikeaflash!

TheFisherman,angryatseeinghismealsnatchedfromunderhisnose,ranaftertheDog,butabadfitofcoughingmadehimstopandturnback。

Meanwhile,Alidoro,assoonashehadfoundtheroadwhichledtothevillage,stoppedanddroppedPinocchiosoftlytotheground。

"HowmuchIdothankyou!"saidtheMarionette。

"Itisnotnecessary,"answeredtheDog。"Yousavedmeonce,andwhatisgivenisalwaysreturned。Weareinthisworldtohelponeanother。"

"Buthowdidyougetinthatcave?"

"Iwaslyinghereonthesandmoredeadthanalive,whenanappetizingodoroffriedfishcametome。ThatodortickledmyhungerandIfollowedit。Oh,ifIhadcomeamomentlater!"

"Don’tspeakaboutit,"wailedPinocchio,stilltremblingwithfright。"Don’tsayaword。Ifyouhadcomeamomentlater,Iwouldbefried,eaten,anddigestedbythistime。Brrrrrr!Ishiveratthemerethoughtofit。"

AlidorolaughinglyheldouthispawtotheMarionette,whoshookitheartily,feelingthatnowheandtheDogweregoodfriends。Thentheybideachothergood-byandtheDogwenthome。

Pinocchio,leftalone,walkedtowardalittlehutnearby,whereanoldmansatatthedoorsunninghimself,andasked:

"Tellme,goodman,haveyouheardanythingofapoorboywithawoundedhead,whosenamewasEugene?"

"Theboywasbroughttothishutandnow——"

"Nowheisdead?"Pinocchiointerruptedsorrowfully。

"No,heisnowaliveandhehasalreadyreturnedhome。"

"Really?Really?"criedtheMarionette,jumpingaroundwithjoy。"Thenthewoundwasnotserious?"

"Butitmighthavebeen——andevenmortal,"answeredtheoldman,"foraheavybookwasthrownathishead。"

"Andwhothrewit?"

"Aschoolmateofhis,acertainPinocchio。"

"AndwhoisthisPinocchio?"askedtheMarionette,feigningignorance。

"Theysayheisamischief-maker,atramp,astreeturchin——"

"Calumnies!Allcalumnies!"

"DoyouknowthisPinocchio?"

"Bysight!"answeredtheMarionette。

"Andwhatdoyouthinkofhim?"askedtheoldman。

"Ithinkhe’saverygoodboy,fondofstudy,obedient,kindtohisFather,andtohiswholefamily——"

Ashewastellingalltheseenormousliesabouthimself,Pinocchiotouchedhisnoseandfoundittwiceaslongasitshouldbe。Scaredoutofhiswits,hecriedout:

"Don’tlistentome,goodman!AllthewonderfulthingsIhavesaidarenottrueatall。IknowPinocchiowellandheisindeedaverywickedfellow,lazyanddisobedient,whoinsteadofgoingtoschool,runsawaywithhisplaymatestohaveagoodtime。"

Atthisspeech,hisnosereturnedtoitsnaturalsize。

"Whyareyousopale?"theoldmanaskedsuddenly。

"Letmetellyou。Withoutknowingit,Irubbedmyselfagainstanewlypaintedwall,"helied,ashamedtosaythathehadbeenmadereadyforthefryingpan。

"Whathaveyoudonewithyourcoatandyourhatandyourbreeches?"

"Imetthievesandtheyrobbedme。Tellme,mygoodman,haveyounot,perhaps,alittlesuittogiveme,sothatImaygohome?"

"Myboy,asforclothes,IhaveonlyabaginwhichI

keephops。Ifyouwantit,takeit。Thereitis。"

Pinocchiodidnotwaitforhimtorepeathiswords。

Hetookthebag,whichhappenedtobeempty,andaftercuttingabigholeatthetopandtwoatthesides,heslippedintoitasifitwereashirt。Lightlycladashewas,hestartedouttowardthevillage。

Alongthewayhefeltveryuneasy。Infacthewassounhappythathewentalongtakingtwostepsforwardandoneback,andashewenthesaidtohimself:

"HowshallIeverfacemygoodlittleFairy?Whatwillshesaywhensheseesme?Willsheforgivethislasttrickofmine?Iamsureshewon’t。Oh,no,shewon’t。

AndIdeserveit,asusual!ForIamarascal,fineonpromiseswhichIneverkeep!"

Hecametothevillagelateatnight。Itwassodarkhecouldseenothinganditwasrainingpitchforks。

PinocchiowentstraighttotheFairy’shouse,firmlyresolvedtoknockatthedoor。

Whenhefoundhimselfthere,helostcourageandranbackafewsteps。Asecondtimehecametothedoorandagainheranback。Athirdtimeherepeatedhisperformance。Thefourthtime,beforehehadtimetolosehiscourage,hegraspedtheknockerandmadeafaintsoundwithit。

Hewaitedandwaitedandwaited。Finally,afterafullhalfhour,atop-floorwindow(thehousehadfourstories)

openedandPinocchiosawalargeSnaillookout。Atinylightglowedontopofherhead。"Whoknocksatthislatehour?"shecalled。

"IstheFairyhome?"askedtheMarionette。

"TheFairyisasleepanddoesnotwishtobedisturbed。

Whoareyou?"

"ItisI。"

"Who’sI?"

"Pinocchio。"

"WhoisPinocchio?"

"TheMarionette;theonewholivesintheFairy’shouse。"

"Oh,Iunderstand,"saidtheSnail。"Waitformethere。

I’llcomedowntoopenthedoorforyou。"

"Hurry,Ibegofyou,forIamdyingofcold。"

"Myboy,Iamasnailandsnailsareneverinahurry。"

Anhourpassed,twohours;andthedoorwasstillclosed。

Pinocchio,whowastremblingwithfearandshiveringfromthecoldrainonhisback,knockedasecondtime,thistimelouderthanbefore。

Atthatsecondknock,awindowonthethirdflooropenedandthesameSnaillookedout。

"DearlittleSnail,"criedPinocchiofromthestreet。

"Ihavebeenwaitingtwohoursforyou!Andtwohoursonadreadfulnightlikethisareaslongastwoyears。

Hurry,please!"

"Myboy,"answeredtheSnailinacalm,peacefulvoice,"mydearboy,Iamasnailandsnailsareneverinahurry。"Andthewindowclosed。

Afewminuteslatermidnightstruck;thenoneo’clock——twoo’clock。Andthedoorstillremainedclosed!

ThenPinocchio,losingallpatience,grabbedtheknockerwithbothhands,fullydeterminedtoawakenthewholehouseandstreetwithit。Assoonashetouchedtheknocker,however,itbecameaneelandwiggledawayintothedarkness。

"Really?"criedPinocchio,blindwithrage。"Iftheknockerisgone,Icanstillusemyfeet。"

Hesteppedbackandgavethedooramostsolemnkick。

Hekickedsohardthathisfootwentstraightthroughthedoorandhislegfollowedalmosttotheknee。Nomatterhowhepulledandtugged,hecouldnotpullitout。Therehestayedasifnailedtothedoor。

PoorPinocchio!Therestofthenighthehadtospendwithonefootthroughthedoorandtheotheroneintheair。

Asdawnwasbreaking,thedoorfinallyopened。Thatbravelittleanimal,theSnail,hadtakenexactlyninehourstogofromthefourthfloortothestreet。Howshemusthaveraced!

"Whatareyoudoingwithyourfootthroughthedoor?"

sheaskedtheMarionette,laughing。

"Itwasamisfortune。Won’tyoutry,prettylittleSnail,tofreemefromthisterribletorture?"

"Myboy,weneedacarpenterhereandIhaveneverbeenone。"

"AsktheFairytohelpme!"

"TheFairyisasleepanddoesnotwanttobedisturbed。"

"Butwhatdoyouwantmetodo,nailedtothedoorlikethis?"

"Enjoyyourselfcountingtheantswhicharepassingby。"

"Bringmesomethingtoeat,atleast,forIamfaintwithhunger。"

"Immediately!"

Infact,afterthreehoursandahalf,Pinocchiosawherreturnwithasilvertrayonherhead。Onthetraytherewasbread,roastchicken,fruit。

"HereisthebreakfasttheFairysendstoyou,"saidtheSnail。

Atthesightofallthesegoodthings,theMarionettefeltmuchbetter。

Whatwashisdisgust,however,whenontastingthefood,hefoundthebreadtobemadeofchalk,thechickenofcardboard,andthebrilliantfruitofcoloredalabaster!

Hewantedtocry,hewantedtogivehimselfuptodespair,hewantedtothrowawaythetrayandallthatwasonit。Instead,eitherfrompainorweakness,hefelltothefloorinadeadfaint。

Whenheregainedhissenses,hefoundhimselfstretchedoutonasofaandtheFairywasseatednearhim。

"ThistimealsoIforgiveyou,"saidtheFairytohim。

"Butbecarefulnottogetintomischiefagain。"

Pinocchiopromisedtostudyandtobehavehimself。

Andhekepthiswordfortheremainderoftheyear。Attheendofit,hepassedfirstinallhisexaminations,andhisreportwassogoodthattheFairysaidtohimhappily:

"Tomorrowyourwishwillcometrue。"

"Andwhatisit?"

"TomorrowyouwillceasetobeaMarionetteandwillbecomearealboy。"

Pinocchiowasbesidehimselfwithjoy。Allhisfriendsandschoolmatesmustbeinvitedtocelebratethegreatevent!TheFairypromisedtopreparetwohundredcupsofcoffee-and-milkandfourhundredslicesoftoastbutteredonbothsides。

Thedaypromisedtobeaverygayandhappyone,but——

Unluckily,inaMarionette’slifethere’salwaysaBUT

whichisapttospoileverything。

CHAPTER30

Pinocchio,insteadofbecomingaboy,runsawaytotheLandofToyswithhisfriend,Lamp-WickComingatlastoutofthesurpriseintowhichtheFairy’swordshadthrownhim,Pinocchioaskedforpermissiontogiveouttheinvitations。

"Indeed,youmayinviteyourfriendstotomorrow’sparty。

Onlyremembertoreturnhomebeforedark。Doyouunderstand?"

"I’llbebackinonehourwithoutfail,"answeredtheMarionette。

"Takecare,Pinocchio!Boysgivepromisesveryeasily,buttheyaseasilyforgetthem。"

"ButIamnotlikethoseothers。WhenIgivemywordIkeepit。"

"Weshallsee。Incaseyoudodisobey,youwillbetheonetosuffer,notanyoneelse。"

"Why?"

"Becauseboyswhodonotlistentotheireldersalwayscometogrief。"

"Icertainlyhave,"saidPinocchio,"butfromnowon,Iobey。"

"Weshallseeifyouaretellingthetruth。"

Withoutaddinganotherword,theMarionettebadethegoodFairygood-by,andsinginganddancing,heleftthehouse。

Inalittlemorethananhour,allhisfriendswereinvited。Someacceptedquicklyandgladly。Othershadtobecoaxed,butwhentheyheardthatthetoastwastobebutteredonbothsides,theyallendedbyacceptingtheinvitationwiththewords,"We’llcometopleaseyou。"

Nowitmustbeknownthat,amongallhisfriends,Pinocchiohadonewhomhelovedmostofall。

Theboy’srealnamewasRomeo,buteveryonecalledhimLamp-Wick,forhewaslongandthinandhadawoebegonelookabouthim。

Lamp-Wickwasthelaziestboyintheschoolandthebiggestmischief-maker,butPinocchiolovedhimdearly。

Thatday,hewentstraighttohisfriend’shousetoinvitehimtotheparty,butLamp-Wickwasnotathome。Hewentasecondtime,andagainathird,butstillwithoutsuccess。

Wherecouldhebe?Pinocchiosearchedhereandthereandeverywhere,andfinallydiscoveredhimhidingnearafarmer’swagon。

"Whatareyoudoingthere?"askedPinocchio,runninguptohim。

"Iamwaitingformidnighttostriketogo——"

"Where?"

"Far,faraway!"

"AndIhavegonetoyourhousethreetimestolookforyou!"

"Whatdidyouwantfromme?"

"Haven’tyouheardthenews?Don’tyouknowwhatgoodluckismine?"

"Whatisit?"

"TomorrowIendmydaysasaMarionetteandbecomeaboy,likeyouandallmyotherfriends。"

"Mayitbringyouluck!"

"ShallIseeyouatmypartytomorrow?"

"ButI’mtellingyouthatIgotonight。"

"Atwhattime?"

"Atmidnight。"

"Andwhereareyougoing?"

"Toarealcountry——thebestintheworld——awonderfulplace!"

"Whatisitcalled?"

"ItiscalledtheLandofToys。Whydon’tyoucome,too?"

"I?Oh,no!"

"Youaremakingabigmistake,Pinocchio。Believeme,ifyoudon’tcome,you’llbesorry。Wherecanyoufindaplacethatwillagreebetterwithyouandme?Noschools,noteachers,nobooks!Inthatblessedplacethereisnosuchthingasstudy。Here,itisonlyonSaturdaysthatwehavenoschool。IntheLandofToys,everyday,exceptSunday,isaSaturday。VacationbeginsonthefirstofJanuaryandendsonthelastdayofDecember。Thatistheplaceforme!Allcountriesshouldbelikeit!

Howhappyweshouldallbe!"

"ButhowdoesonespendthedayintheLandofToys?"

"Daysarespentinplayandenjoymentfrommorntillnight。Atnightonegoestobed,andnextmorning,thegoodtimesbeginalloveragain。Whatdoyouthinkofit?"

"H’m——!"saidPinocchio,noddinghiswoodenhead,asiftosay,"It’sthekindoflifewhichwouldagreewithmeperfectly。"

"Doyouwanttogowithme,then?Yesorno?Youmustmakeupyourmind。"

"No,no,andagainno!IhavepromisedmykindFairytobecomeagoodboy,andIwanttokeepmyword。Justsee:ThesunissettingandImustleaveyouandrun。

Good-byandgoodlucktoyou!"

"Whereareyougoinginsuchahurry?"

"Home。MygoodFairywantsmetoreturnhomebeforenight。"

"Waittwominutesmore。"

"It’stoolate!"

"Onlytwominutes。"

"AndiftheFairyscoldsme?"

"Letherscold。Aftershegetstired,shewillstop,"saidLamp-Wick。

"Areyougoingaloneorwithothers?"

"Alone?Therewillbemorethanahundredofus!"

"Willyouwalk?"

"Atmidnightthewagonpassesherethatistotakeuswithintheboundariesofthatmarvelouscountry。"

"HowIwishmidnightwouldstrike!"

"Why?"

"Toseeyouallsetouttogether。"

"Stayhereawhilelongerandyouwillseeus!"

"No,no。Iwanttoreturnhome。"

"Waittwomoreminutes。"

"Ihavewaitedtoolongasitis。TheFairywillbeworried。"

"PoorFairy!Issheafraidthebatswilleatyouup?"

"Listen,Lamp-Wick,"saidtheMarionette,"areyoureallysurethattherearenoschoolsintheLandofToys?"

"Noteventheshadowofone。"

"Notevenoneteacher?"

"Notone。"

"Andonedoesnothavetostudy?"

"Never,never,never!"

"Whatagreatland!"saidPinocchio,feelinghismouthwater。

"Whatabeautifulland!Ihaveneverbeenthere,butIcanwellimagineit。"

"Whydon’tyoucome,too?"

"Itisuselessforyoutotemptme!ItoldyouIpromisedmygoodFairytobehavemyself,andIamgoingtokeepmyword。"

"Good-by,then,andremembermetothegrammarschools,tothehighschools,andeventothecollegesifyoumeetthemontheway。"

"Good-by,Lamp-Wick。Haveapleasanttrip,enjoyyourself,andrememberyourfriendsonceinawhile。"

Withthesewords,theMarionettestartedonhiswayhome。Turningoncemoretohisfriend,heaskedhim:

"Butareyousurethat,inthatcountry,eachweekiscomposedofsixSaturdaysandoneSunday?"

"Verysure!"

"AndthatvacationbeginsonthefirstofJanuaryandendsonthethirty-firstofDecember?"

"Very,verysure!"

"Whatagreatcountry!"repeatedPinocchio,puzzledastowhattodo。

Then,insuddendetermination,hesaidhurriedly:

"Good-byforthelasttime,andgoodluck。"

"Good-by。"

"Howsoonwillyougo?"

"Withintwohours。"

"Whatapity!Ifitwereonlyonehour,Imightwaitforyou。"

"AndtheFairy?"

"BythistimeI’mlate,andonehourmoreorlessmakesverylittledifference。"

"PoorPinocchio!AndiftheFairyscoldsyou?"

"Oh,I’llletherscold。Aftershegetstired,shewillstop。"

Inthemeantime,thenightbecamedarkeranddarker。

Allatonceinthedistanceasmalllightflickered。A

queersoundcouldbeheard,softasalittlebell,andfaintandmuffledlikethebuzzofafar-awaymosquito。

"Thereitis!"criedLamp-Wick,jumpingtohisfeet。

"What?"whisperedPinocchio。

"Thewagonwhichiscomingtogetme。Forthelasttime,areyoucomingornot?"

"Butisitreallytruethatinthatcountryboysneverhavetostudy?"

"Never,never,never!"

"Whatawonderful,beautiful,marvelouscountry!Oh——h——h!!"

CHAPTER31

Afterfivemonthsofplay,PinocchiowakesuponefinemorningandfindsagreatsurpriseawaitinghimFinallythewagonarrived。Itmadenonoise,foritswheelswereboundwithstrawandrags。

Itwasdrawnbytwelvepairofdonkeys,allofthesamesize,butallofdifferentcolor。Someweregray,otherswhite,andstillothersamixtureofbrownandblack。

Hereandtherewereafewwithlargeyellowandbluestripes。

Thestrangestthingofallwasthatthosetwenty-fourdonkeys,insteadofbeingiron-shodlikeanyotherbeastofburden,hadontheirfeetlacedshoesmadeofleather,justliketheonesboyswear。

Andthedriverofthewagon?

Imaginetoyourselvesalittle,fatman,muchwiderthanhewaslong,roundandshinyasaballofbutter,withafacebeaminglikeanapple,alittlemouththatalwayssmiled,andavoicesmallandwheedlinglikethatofacatbeggingforfood。

Nosoonerdidanyboyseehimthanhefellinlovewithhim,andnothingsatisfiedhimbuttobeallowedtorideinhiswagontothatlovelyplacecalledtheLandofToys。

Infactthewagonwassocloselypackedwithboysofallagesthatitlookedlikeaboxofsardines。Theywereuncomfortable,theywerepiledoneontopoftheother,theycouldhardlybreathe;yetnotonewordofcomplaintwasheard。Thethoughtthatinafewhourstheywouldreachacountrywheretherewerenoschools,nobooks,noteachers,madetheseboyssohappythattheyfeltneitherhunger,northirst,norsleep,nordiscomfort。

NosoonerhadthewagonstoppedthanthelittlefatmanturnedtoLamp-Wick。Withbowsandsmiles,heaskedinawheedlingtone:

"Tellme,myfineboy,doyoualsowanttocometomywonderfulcountry?"

"IndeedIdo。"

"ButIwarnyou,mylittledear,there’snomoreroominthewagon。Itisfull。"

"Nevermind,"answeredLamp-Wick。"Ifthere’snoroominside,Icansitonthetopofthecoach。"

Andwithoneleap,heperchedhimselfthere。

"Whataboutyou,mylove?"askedtheLittleMan,turningpolitelytoPinocchio。"Whatareyougoingtodo?

Willyoucomewithus,ordoyoustayhere?"

"Istayhere,"answeredPinocchio。"Iwanttoreturnhome,asIprefertostudyandtosucceedinlife。"

"Maythatbringyouluck!"

"Pinocchio!"Lamp-Wickcalledout。"Listentome。

Comewithusandwe’llalwaysbehappy。"

"No,no,no!"

"Comewithusandwe’llalwaysbehappy,"criedfourothervoicesfromthewagon。

"Comewithusandwe’llalwaysbehappy,"shoutedtheonehundredandmoreboysinthewagon,alltogether。

"AndifIgowithyou,whatwillmygoodFairysay?"

askedtheMarionette,whowasbeginningtowaverandweakeninhisgoodresolutions。

"Don’tworrysomuch。Onlythinkthatwearegoingtoalandwhereweshallbeallowedtomakealltheracketwelikefrommorningtillnight。"

Pinocchiodidnotanswer,butsigheddeeplyonce——

twice——athirdtime。Finally,hesaid:

"Makeroomforme。Iwanttogo,too!"

"Theseatsareallfilled,"answeredtheLittleMan,"buttoshowyouhowmuchIthinkofyou,takemyplaceascoachman。"

"Andyou?"

"I’llwalk。"

"No,indeed。Icouldnotpermitsuchathing。Imuchpreferridingoneofthesedonkeys,"criedPinocchio。

【推荐阅读】幽幽深宫,醒来一梦似千年,重生于下堂妃身躯中的她,将如何手刃仇人? 点击阅读

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