With a final heave they jammed (塞) him into the crate. The geese cheered. Lurvy nailed (钉) some boards across the end, so Wilbur couldn't back out.
Then, using all their strength (力量), the men picked up the crate and heaved it aboard the truck.
They did not know that under the straw was a rat, and inside a knothole was a big grey spider. They only saw the pig.
"Everybody in!" called Mr. Arable. He started the motor. The ladies climbed in beside him.
Mr. Zuckerman and Lurvy and Fern and Avery rode in back, hanging onto the sideboards. The truck began to move ahead. The geese cheered.
The children answered their cheer, and away went everybody to the Fair.
When they pulled into the Fair Grounds, they could hear music and see the Ferris wheel turning in the sky.
They could smell the dust of the race track where the sprinkling cart (洒水车) had moistened (弄湿) it; and they could smell hamburgers frying and see balloons aloft. They could hear sheep blatting in their pens.
An enormous (巨大的) voice over the loudspeaker said: “Attention, please! Will the owner of a Pontiac car, license number H-2439, please move your car away from the fireworks shed!"
"Can I have some money?" asked Fern.
"Can I, too?" asked Avery.
"I'm going to win a doll by spinning a wheel and it will stop at the right number," said Fern.
"I'm going to steer a jet plane and make it bump into (撞上) another one."
"Can I have a balloon?" asked Fern.
"Can I have a frozen custard and a cheeseburger and some raspberry (树莓) soda pop?" asked Avery.
"You children be quiet till we get the pig unloaded," said Mrs. Arable.
"Let's let the children go off by themselves," suggested Mr. Arable. "The Fair only comes once a year."
Mr. Arable gave Fern two quarters and two dimes. He gave Avery five dimes and four nickels.
"Now run along!" he said. "And remember, the money has to last all day. Don't spend it all the first few minutes. And be back here at the truck at noontime so we can all have lunch together.
And don't eat a lot of stuff that's going to make you sick to your stomachs."
"And if you go in those swings," said Mrs. Arable, "you hang on tight! You hang on very tight. Hear me?"
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"And don't get lost!" said Mrs. Zuckerman.
"And don't get dirty!"
"Don't get overheated!" said their mother.
"Watch out for pickpockets (扒手)!" cautioned (警告) their father.
"And don't cross the race track when the horses are coming!" cried Mrs. Zuckerman.
The children grabbed each other by the hand and danced off in the direction of the merry-go-round (旋转木马), toward the wonderful music and the wonderful adventure and the wonderful excitement, into the wonderful midway where there would be no parents to guard them and guide them, and where they could be happy and free and do as they pleased.
Mrs. Arable stood quietly and watched them go. Then she sighed. Then she blew her nose.
"Do you really think it's all right?" she asked.
"Well, they've got to grow up some time," said Mr. Arable. "And a fair is a good place to start, I guess."
While Wilbur was being unloaded and taken out of his crate and into his new pigpen, crowds gathered (聚集) to watch. They stared at the sign ZUCKERMAN'S FAMOUS PIG.
Wilbur stared back and tried to look extra good. He was pleased with his new home. The pen was grassy, and it was shaded (使阴凉) from the sun by a shed roof.
Charlotte, watching her chance, scrambled out of the crate and climbed a post to the underside of the roof. Nobody noticed her.
Templeton, not wishing to come out in broad daylight, stayed quietly under the straw at the bottom of the crate.
Mr. Zuckerman poured some skim (脱脂的) milk into Wilbur's trough, pitched clean straw into his pen, and then he and Mrs. Zuckerman and the Arables walked away toward the cattle barn to look at purebred (纯种的) cows and to see the sights.
Mr. Zuckerman particularly wanted to look at tractors (拖拉机). Mrs. Zuckerman wanted to see a deep freeze.
Lurvy wandered off by himself, hoping to meet friends and have some fun on the midway.
As soon as the people were gone, Charlotte spoke to Wilbur.
"It's a good thing you can't see what I see," she said.
"What do you see?" asked Wilbur.
"There's a pig in the next pen and he's enormous. I'm afraid he's much bigger than you are."
"Maybe he's older than I am, and has had more time to grow," suggested Wilbur. Tears began to come to his eyes.
"I'll drop down and have a closer look," Charlotte said. Then she crawled along a beam till she was directly over the next pen.
She let herself down on a dragline until she hung in the air just in front of the big pig's snout.
"May I have your name?" she asked, politely.
The pig stared at her. "No name," he said in a big, hearty (精神饱满的) voice.
"Just call me Uncle."
"Very well, Uncle," replied Charlotte. "What is the date of your birth? Are you a spring pig?"
"Sure I'm a spring pig," replied Uncle. "What did you think I was, a spring chicken? Haw, haw--that's a good one, eh, Sister?"
"Mildly funny," said Charlotte. "I've heard funnier ones, though.
Glad to have met you, and now I must be going."
She ascended (上升) slowly and returned to Wilbur's pen.
"He claims he's a spring pig," reported Charlotte, "and perhaps he is. One thing is certain, he has a most unattractive personality.
He is too familiar, too noisy, and he cracks weak jokes.
Also, he's not anywhere near as clean as you are, nor as pleasant. I took quite a dislike to him in our brief interview. He's going to be a hard pig to beat, though, Wilbur, on account of his size and weight. But with me helping you, it can be done."
"When are you going to spin a web?" asked Wilbur.
"This afternoon, late, if I'm not too tired," said Charlotte. "The least thing tires me these days. I don't seem to have the energy I once had. My age, I guess."
Wilbur looked at his friend. She looked rather swollen (憔悴的) and she seemed listless.
"I'm awfully sorry to hear you're feeling poorly, Charlotte," he said." Perhaps if you spin a web and catch a couple of flies you'll feel better."
"Perhaps," she said, wearily. "But I feel like the end of a long day." Clinging upside down to the ceiling, she settled down for a nap, leaving Wilbur very much worried.
All morning people wandered past Wilbur's pen. Dozens and dozens of strangers stopped to stare at him and to admire his silky white coat, his curly tail, his kind and radiant expression.
Then they would move on to the next pen where the bigger pig lay. Wilbur heard several people make favorable remarks about Uncle's great size. He couldn't help worrying.
"And now, with Charlotte not feeling well..." he thought. "Oh, dear!"
All morning Templeton slept quietly under the straw. The day grew fiercely (猛烈地) hot. At noon the Zuckermans and the Arables returned to the pigpen.
Then, a few minutes later, Fern and Avery showed up. Fern had a monkey doll in her arms and was eating Cracker-jack.
Avery had a balloon tied to his ear and was chewing a candied apple. The children were hot and dirty.
"Isn't it hot?" said Mrs. Zuckerman.
"It's terribly hot," said Mrs. Arable, fanning (扇风) herself with an advertisement of a deep freeze.
One by one they climbed into the truck and opened lunch boxes. The sun beat down on everything. Nobody seemed hungry.
"When are the judges going to decide about Wilbur?" asked Mrs. Zuckerman.
"Not till tomorrow," said Mr. Zuckerman.
Lurvy appeared, carrying an Indian blanket that he had won.
"That's just what we need," said Avery. "A blanket."
"Of course it is," replied Lurvy. And he spread the blanket across the sideboards of the truck so it was like a little tent. The children sat in the shade, under the blanket, and felt better.
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After lunch, they stretched out (躺平) and fell asleep.
In the cool of the evening, when shadows darkened (使黑暗) the Fair Grounds, Templeton crept from the crate and looked around.
Wilbur lay asleep in the straw. Charlotte was building a web. Templeton's keen nose detected many fine smells in the air.
The rat was hungry and thirsty. He decided to go exploring. Without saying anything to anybody, he started off.
"Bring me back a word!" Charlotte called after him. "I shall be writing tonight for the last time."
The rat mumbled something to himself and disappeared into the shadows. He did not like being treated like a messenger boy.