Pinocchio eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 156 pages of information about Pinocchio.

Pinocchio eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 156 pages of information about Pinocchio.

CHAPTER XXVI

THE TERRIBLE DOG-FISH

The following day Pinocchio went to the government school.  Imagine the delight of all the little rogues, when they saw a puppet walk into their school!  They set up a roar of laughter that never ended.  They played him all sorts of tricks.  One boy carried off his cap, another pulled his jacket behind; one tried to give him a pair of inky mustachios just under his nose, and another attempted to tie strings to his feet and hands to make him dance.

For a short time Pinocchio pretended not to care and got on as well as he could; but at last, losing all patience, he turned to those who were teasing him most and making game of him, and said to them, looking very angry: 

“Beware, boys!  I have not come here to be your buffoon.  I respect others, and I intend to be respected.”

[Illustration:  “Oh, I Am Sick of Being a Puppet!” Cried Pinocchio]

“Well said, boaster!  You have spoken like a book!” howled the young rascals, convulsed with mad laughter, and one of them, more impertinent than the others, stretched out his hand, intending to seize the puppet by the end of his nose.

But he was not in time, for Pinocchio stuck his leg out from under the table and gave him a great kick on his shins.

“Oh, what hard feet!” roared the boy, rubbing the bruise that the puppet had given him.

“And what elbows! even harder than his feet!” said another, who for his rude tricks had received a blow in the stomach.

But, nevertheless, the kick and the blow acquired at once for Pinocchio the sympathy and the esteem of all the boys in the school.  They all made friends with him and liked him heartily.

And even the master praised him, for he found him attentive, studious and intelligent—­always the first to come to school, and the last to leave when school was over.

But he had one fault:  he made too many friends, and amongst them were several young rascals well known for their dislike to study and love of mischief.

The master warned him every day, and even the good Fairy never failed to tell him and to repeat constantly: 

“Take care, Pinocchio!  Those bad school-fellows of yours will end sooner or later by making you lose all love of study, and perhaps they may even bring upon you some great misfortune.”

“There is no fear of that!” answered the puppet, shrugging his shoulders and touching his forehead as much as to say:  “There is so much sense here!”

Now it happened that one fine day, as he was on his way to school, he met several of his usual companions who, coming up to him, asked: 

“Have you heard the great news?”

“No.”

“In the sea near here a Dog-Fish has appeared as big as a mountain.”

“Not really?  Can it be the same Dog-Fish that was there when my papa was drowned?”

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Pinocchio from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.