The Greatest Adventure Books for Children. Люси Мод Монтгомери

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Название The Greatest Adventure Books for Children
Автор произведения Люси Мод Монтгомери
Жанр Книги для детей: прочее
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Издательство Книги для детей: прочее
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isbn 4064066310295



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a rope and hanged me to a tree, saying, ‘Tomorrow we’ll come back for you and you’ll be dead and your mouth will be open, and then we’ll take the gold pieces that you have hidden under your tongue.’”

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      “Where are the gold pieces now?” the Fairy asked.

      “I lost them,” answered Pinocchio, but he told a lie, for he had them in his pocket.

      As he spoke, his nose, long though it was, became at least two inches longer.

      “And where did you lose them?”

      “In the wood near by.”

      At this second lie, his nose grew a few more inches.

      “If you lost them in the near-by wood,” said the Fairy, “we’ll look for them and find them, for everything that is lost there is always found.”

      “Ah, now I remember,” replied the Marionette, becoming more and more confused. “I did not lose the gold pieces, but I swallowed them when I drank the medicine.”

      At this third lie, his nose became longer than ever, so long that he could not even turn around. If he turned to the right, he knocked it against the bed or into the windowpanes; if he turned to the left, he struck the walls or the door; if he raised it a bit, he almost put the Fairy’s eyes out.

      The Fairy sat looking at him and laughing.

      “Why do you laugh?” the Marionette asked her, worried now at the sight of his growing nose.

      “I am laughing at your lies.”

      “How do you know I am lying?”

      “Lies, my boy, are known in a moment. There are two kinds of lies, lies with short legs and lies with long noses. Yours, just now, happen to have long noses.”

      Pinocchio, not knowing where to hide his shame, tried to escape from the room, but his nose had become so long that he could not get it out of the door.

       Table of Contents

      Pinocchio finds the Fox and the Cat again, and goes with them to sow the gold pieces in the Field of Wonders.

      Crying as if his heart would break, the Marionette mourned for hours over the length of his nose. No matter how he tried, it would not go through the door. The Fairy showed no pity toward him, as she was trying to teach him a good lesson, so that he would stop telling lies, the worst habit any boy may acquire. But when she saw him, pale with fright and with his eyes half out of his head from terror, she began to feel sorry for him and clapped her hands together. A thousand woodpeckers flew in through the window and settled themselves on Pinocchio’s nose. They pecked and pecked so hard at that enormous nose that in a few moments, it was the same size as before.

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      “How good you are, my Fairy,” said Pinocchio, drying his eyes, “and how much I love you!”

      “I love you, too,” answered the Fairy, “and if you wish to stay with me, you may be my little brother and I’ll be your good little sister.”

      “I should like to stay — but what about my poor father?”

      “I have thought of everything. Your father has been sent for and before night he will be here.”

      “Really?” cried Pinocchio joyfully. “Then, my good Fairy, if you are willing, I should like to go to meet him. I cannot wait to kiss that dear old man, who has suffered so much for my sake.”

      “Surely; go ahead, but be careful not to lose your way. Take the wood path and you’ll surely meet him.”

      Pinocchio set out, and as soon as he found himself in the wood, he ran like a hare. When he reached the giant oak tree he stopped, for he thought he heard a rustle in the brush. He was right. There stood the Fox and the Cat, the two traveling companions with whom he had eaten at the Inn of the Red Lobster.

      “Here comes our dear Pinocchio!” cried the Fox, hugging and kissing him. “How did you happen here?”

      “How did you happen here?” repeated the Cat.

      “It is a long story,” said the Marionette. “Let me tell it to you. The other night, when you left me alone at the Inn, I met the Assassins on the road — ”

      “The Assassins? Oh, my poor friend! And what did they want?”

      “They wanted my gold pieces.”

      “Rascals!” said the Fox.

      “The worst sort of rascals!” added the Cat.

      “But I began to run,” continued the Marionette, “and they after me, until they overtook me and hanged me to the limb of that oak.”

      Pinocchio pointed to the giant oak near by.

      “Could anything be worse?” said the Fox.

      “What an awful world to live in! Where shall we find a safe place for gentlemen like ourselves?”

      As the Fox talked thus, Pinocchio noticed that the Cat carried his right paw in a sling.

      “What happened to your paw?” he asked.

      The Cat tried to answer, but he became so terribly twisted in his speech that the Fox had to help him out.

      “My friend is too modest to answer. I’ll answer for him. About an hour ago, we met an old wolf on the road. He was half starved and begged for help. Having nothing to give him, what do you think my friend did out of the kindness of his heart? With his teeth, he bit off the paw of his front foot and threw it at that poor beast, so that he might have something to eat.”

      As he spoke, the Fox wiped off a tear.

      Pinocchio, almost in tears himself, whispered in the Cat’s ear:

      “If all the cats were like you, how lucky the mice would be!”

      “And what are you doing here?” the Fox asked the Marionette.

      “I am waiting for my father, who will be here at any moment now.”

      “And your gold pieces?”

      “I still have them in my pocket, except one which I spent at the Inn of the Red Lobster.”

      “To think that those four gold pieces might become two thousand tomorrow. Why don’t you listen to me? Why don’t you sow them in the Field of Wonders?”

      “Today it is impossible. I’ll go with you some other time.”

      “Another day will be too late,” said the Fox.

      “Why?”

      “Because that field has been bought by a very rich man, and today is the last day that it will be open to the public.”

      “How far is this Field of Wonders?”

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      “Only two miles away. Will you come with us? We’ll be there in half an hour. You can sow the money, and, after a few minutes, you will gather your two thousand coins and return home rich. Are you coming?”

      Pinocchio hesitated a moment before answering, for he remembered the good Fairy, old Geppetto, and the advice of the Talking Cricket. Then he ended by doing what all boys do, when they have no heart and little brain. He shrugged his shoulders and said to the Fox and the Cat:

      “Let us