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CHAPTER 23 As soon
as Pinocchio was relieved from the weight of the hard and humiliating
collar he
started to run across the fields; and he did not stop one minute until
he had
reached the road that led to the house of the Fairy. When he
reached the road he looked down on the forest where he had
unfortunately met
the Fox and the Cat, and there in the middle he saw the great oak to
which they
had hanged him. He looked in the direction of the little white house
where the
Fairy with the Blue Hair lived, but he could not find it at all. Then a
feeling of sadness came over him. Nevertheless he ran as fast as his
legs would
take him and in a few minutes he reached the field where the little
white house
had stood. But the white house was there no more. There was instead a
little
marble slab on which were cut the follow. ing words: The Fairy with the Blue Hair Dead with Grief For having been abandoned by her Little Brother Pinocchio. "Oh,
my little Fairy, why are you dead?" he cried. "Why, instead of you,
am I not dead? Oh, my dear little Fairy, tell me where I can find my
papa. I
wish to be with him and never leave him any more. Oh, tell me that it
is not
true that you are dead. If you truly love me, if you like your little
brother,
come back! return to life! Does it not make you unhappy to see me left
all
alone by everybody? If the assassins come and hang me to a tree again,
I shall
die this time for sure. What can I do alone in this world, now that I
have lost
my papa and you? Who will give me anything to eat? Where shall I sleep
at
night? Who will make my clothes? Oh, it would be better, a hundred
times
better, that I should die! Yes, I wish to die! 1h! ih!
ih!" While he
despaired in this manner he wished to pull out his hair; but his hair
being of
wood he was not able to raise even a lock. A large
Dove who was flying around, seeing the little marionette leaning on the
marble
slab, stopped, and, hovering in the air, said, "Tell me, my little boy,
what are you doing down there?" "Do
you not see that I am crying?" said Pinocchio, raising his head toward
the
voice and drying his eyes with the sleeve of his jacket. "Tell
me," added the Dove, "do you not know among your companions a
marionette who is called Pinocchio?" "Pinocchio?
Did you say Pinocchio?" cried the marionette, jumping to his feet; "I
am Pinocchio." When the
Dove heard this he flew down to the ground. He was as large as a turkey
cock. "'Do
you also know Geppetto?" asked the Dove. "Do
I know him? He is my poor papa. Has he asked you about me? Can you take
me to
him? Is he alive? Tell me, is he alive?" "I
left him three days ago on the seashore." "What
was he doing?" "He
was making a little boat in order to cross the ocean. For four months
the poor
man has been looking for you, and not being able to find you he began
to build
a boat and now he is going to look for you in another country." "How
far is it to the shore?" asked Pinocchio. "A thousand miles." "A
thousand miles! Oh, Dove! Oh, if only I had a pair of wings!" "If
you wish to go, I will carry you." "How?" "On
my back. Are you heavy?" "No,
indeed. I am as light as a feather." And then
without saying anything further, Pinocchio jumped on the back of the
Dove and
put a leg back of each wing just like a man on horseback. He then cried
to the
Dove, "All ready, go!" The Dove spread his wings and in a few moments
they almost touched the clouds. Arriving at that extraordinary height,
the
marionette had the curiosity to turn around and look down. He was so
scared
when he took a view of the country below that he was obliged to put his
arms
around the Dove's neck. They flew all day long. Toward evening the Dove said, "I am very thirsty." "I
am very hungry," added Pinocchio. "Let
us stop at this dove house a few minutes, and afterward we will start
on our
way again, so as to be at the shore to-morrow morning." They
entered a dove house which they found deserted except that there was a
little
basin of water and also a small basket of chick peas placed near the
door. In all
his life the marionette had never been able to eat chick peas; to hear
the name
always made him sick. But that night he ate them ravenously, and when
he had
nearly finished he turned to the Dove and said, "I would never have
believed that chick peas could taste so good." "It
is well to know, my boy," replied the Dove, "that when you are truly
hungry even the chick pea seems delicious. Hunger has no whims or
fancies." Having
eaten their lunch quickly, they started on their journey. The next
morning they
arrived on the seashore. The Dove
placed Pinocchio on the ground, and, not wishing the annoyance of
hearing
himself thanked for his good action, flew suddenly away and
disappeared. The
shore was crowded with people who were crying and gesticulating,
looking toward
the sea. "What
has happened?" asked Pinocchio of an old woman. "There
is an old man, who, having lost his little boy, ventured to go to sea
to-day in
search of him, and the water is so rough that we are afraid he will
sink." "Where
is the boat?" "There
it is; follow my finger," said the old lady, pointing to a little boat
that from where they stood looked like a walnut shell with a very small
man
inside. "It is my papa! It is my papa!" Meanwhile
the little boat, tossed around by the waves, now disappeared between
the
billows, now floated on top. Pinocchio, standing on a point of a high
reef,
called his papa by name and made many signals with his arms and finally
with
the cap on his head. It appeared that Geppetto, although very far away
from the
shore, recognized him, because he also raised his cap and made it
clearly
understood that he would come to shore were it not that he was
prevented by the
heavy seas. All of a
sudden there came a terrible wave and the boat disappeared. They waited
on
shore to see it rise but it was never seen again. "Poor
man!" said the fishermen; but they could not help him so they turned
away. Then
they heard a cry. Looking around, they saw a little boy on the top of a
reef
throw himself into the water. "I
want to save my papa," he said. Pinocchio,
being made of wood, floated easily, and he could swim like a fish. Now
he was
seen to disappear under the water, carried by the current; now he
appeared
again, striking out against the waves. The fishermen watched him until
he was
so far from shore that they could not see him any longer. "Poor
boy!" they said; and, as they could do nothing for him, they went home.
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