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"Blessed Providence! Once more I'll have a fine meal of fish!" Voice Reading
"Thank Heaven, I'm not a fish!" said Pinocchio to himself, trying with these words to find a little courage. Voice Reading
The Fisherman took the net and the fish to the cave, a dark, gloomy, smoky place. In the middle of it, a pan full of oil sizzled over a smoky fire, sending out a repelling odor of tallow that took away one's breath. Voice Reading
"Now, let's see what kind of fish we have caught today," said the Green Fisherman. He put a hand as big as a spade into the net and pulled out a handful of mullets. Voice Reading
"Fine mullets, these!" he said, after looking at them and smelling them with pleasure. After that, he threw them into a large, empty tub. Voice Reading
Many times he repeated this performance. As he pulled each fish out of the net, his mouth watered with the thought of the good dinner coming, and he said: Voice Reading
"Fine fish, these bass!" Voice Reading
"Very tasty, these whitefish!" Voice Reading
"Delicious flounders, these!" Voice Reading
"What splendid crabs!" Voice Reading
"And these dear little anchovies, with their heads still on!" Voice Reading
As you can well imagine, the bass, the flounders, the whitefish, and even the little anchovies all went together into the tub to keep the mullets company. The last to come out of the net was Pinocchio. Voice Reading
As soon as the Fisherman pulled him out, his green eyes opened wide with surprise, and he cried out in fear: Voice Reading
"What kind of fish is this? I don't remember ever eating anything like it." Voice Reading
He looked at him closely and after turning him over and over, he said at last: Voice Reading
"I understand. He must be a crab!" Voice Reading
Pinocchio, mortified at being taken for a crab, said resentfully: Voice Reading
"What nonsense! A crab indeed! I am no such thing. Beware how you deal with me! I am a Marionette, I want you to know." Voice Reading
"A Marionette?" asked the Fisherman. "I must admit that a Marionette fish is, for me, an entirely new kind of fish. So much the better. I'll eat you with greater relish." Voice Reading
"Eat me? But can't you understand that I'm not a fish? Can't you hear that I speak and think as you do?" Voice Reading
"It's true," answered the Fisherman; "but since I see that you are a fish, well able to talk and think as I do, I'll treat you with all due respect." Voice Reading
"And that is-" Voice Reading
"That, as a sign of my particular esteem, I'll leave to you the choice of the manner in which you are to be cooked. Do you wish to be fried in a pan, or do you prefer to be cooked with tomato sauce?" Voice Reading
"To tell you the truth," answered Pinocchio, "if I must choose, I should much rather go free so I may return home!" Voice Reading
"Are you fooling? Do you think that I want to lose the opportunity to taste such a rare fish? A Marionette fish does not come very often to these seas. Leave it to me. I'll fry you in the pan with the others. I know you'll like it. It's always a comfort to find oneself in good company." Voice Reading

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