Page:Collodi - The Story of a Puppet, translation Murray, 1892.djvu/200

 'Why not? But first, my dear Pinocchio, I should like to see yours.'

'No: you must be the first.'

'No, dear! First you and then I!'

'Well,' said the puppet, 'let us come to an agreement like good friends.'

'Let us hear it.'

'We will both take off our caps at the same moment. Do you agree?'

'I agree.'

'Then attention!'

And Pinocchio began to count in a loud voice:

'One! Two! Three!'

At the word three! the two boys took off their caps and threw them into the air.

And then a scene followed that would seem incredible if it was not true. That is, that when Pinocchio and Candlewick discovered that they were both struck with the same misfortune, instead of feeling full of mortification and grief, they began to prick their ungainly ears and to make a thousand antics, and they ended by going into bursts of laughter.

And they laughed, and laughed, and laughed, until they had to hold themselves together. But in the midst of their merriment Candlewick suddenly stopped, staggered, and changing colour said to his friend:

'Help, help, Pinocchio!'