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"I deserve it!" he said to himself. "I should have thought of this before I made him. Now it's too late!" Voice Reading
He took hold of the Marionette under the arms and put him on the floor to teach him to walk. Voice Reading
Pinocchio's legs were so stiff that he could not move them, and Geppetto held his hand and showed him how to put out one foot after the other. Voice Reading
When his legs were limbered up, Pinocchio started walking by himself and ran all around the room. He came to the open door, and with one leap he was out into the street. Away he flew! Voice Reading
Poor Geppetto ran after him but was unable to catch him, for Pinocchio ran in leaps and bounds, his two wooden feet, as they beat on the stones of the street, making as much noise as twenty peasants in wooden shoes. Voice Reading
"Catch him! Catch him!" Geppetto kept shouting. But the people in the street, seeing a wooden Marionette running like the wind, stood still to stare and to laugh until they cried. Voice Reading
At last, by sheer luck, a Carabineer* happened along, who, hearing all that noise, thought that it might be a runaway colt, and stood bravely in the middle of the street, with legs wide apart, firmly resolved to stop it and prevent any trouble. Voice Reading
* A military policeman Voice Reading
Pinocchio saw the Carabineer from afar and tried his best to escape between the legs of the big fellow, but without success. Voice Reading
The Carabineer grabbed him by the nose (it was an extremely long one and seemed made on purpose for that very thing) and returned him to Mastro Geppetto. Voice Reading
The little old man wanted to pull Pinocchio's ears. Think how he felt when, upon searching for them, he discovered that he had forgotten to make them! Voice Reading
All he could do was to seize Pinocchio by the back of the neck and take him home. As he was doing so, he shook him two or three times and said to him angrily: Voice Reading
"We're going home now. When we get home, then we'll settle this matter!" Voice Reading
Pinocchio, on hearing this, threw himself on the ground and refused to take another step. One person after another gathered around the two. Voice Reading
Some said one thing, some another. Voice Reading
"Poor Marionette," called out a man. "I am not surprised he doesn't want to go home. Geppetto, no doubt, will beat him unmercifully, he is so mean and cruel!" Voice Reading
"Geppetto looks like a good man," added another, "but with boys he's a real tyrant. If we leave that poor Marionette in his hands he may tear him to pieces!" Voice Reading
They said so much that, finally, the Carabineer ended matters by setting Pinocchio at liberty and dragging Geppetto to prison. The poor old fellow did not know how to defend himself, but wept and wailed like a child and said between his sobs: Voice Reading
"Ungrateful boy! To think I tried so hard to make you a well-behaved Marionette! I deserve it, however! I should have given the matter more thought." Voice Reading
What happened after this is an almost unbelievable story, but you may read it, dear children, in the chapters that follow. Voice Reading
CHAPTER 4
The story of Pinocchio and the Talking Cricket, in which one sees that bad children do not like to be corrected by those who know more than they do. Voice Reading
Very little time did it take to get poor old Geppetto to prison. Voice Reading
In the meantime that rascal, Pinocchio, free now from the clutches of the Carabineer, was running wildly across fields and meadows, taking one short cut after another toward home. In his wild flight, he leaped over brambles and bushes, and across brooks and ponds, as if he were a goat or a hare chased by hounds. Voice Reading
On reaching home, he found the house door half open. He slipped into the room, locked the door, and threw himself on the floor, happy at his escape. Voice Reading

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