Madame Bovary NT
Madame Bovary NT
Madame Bovary NT
Gustave Flaubert
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Madame Bovary
To Marie-Antoine-Jules Senard
Member of the Paris Bar, Ex-President of the National
Assembly, and Former Minister of the Interior
Dear and Illustrious Friend,
Permit me to inscribe your name at the head of this book,
and above its dedication; for it is to you, before all, that I
owe its publication. Reading over your magnificent
defence, my work has acquired for myself, as it were, an
unexpected authority.
Accept, then, here, the homage of my gratitude, which,
how great soever it is, will never attain the height of your
eloquence and your devotion.
Gustave Flaubert
Paris, 12 April 1857
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Part I
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CHAPTER ONE
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taken from his cap. ‘As to you, ‘new boy,’ you will
conjugate ‘ridiculus sum’** twenty times.’
Then, in a gentler tone, ‘Come, you’ll find your cap
again; it hasn’t been stolen.’
*A quotation from the Aeneid signifying a threat.
**I am ridiculous.
Quiet was restored. Heads bent over desks, and the
‘new fellow’ remained for two hours in an exemplary
attitude, although from time to time some paper pellet
flipped from the tip of a pen came bang in his face. But he
wiped his face with one hand and continued motionless,
his eyes lowered.
In the evening, at preparation, he pulled out his pens
from his desk, arranged his small belongings, and carefully
ruled his paper. We saw him working conscientiously,
looking up every word in the dictionary, and taking the
greatest pains. Thanks, no doubt, to the willingness he
showed, he had not to go down to the class below. But
though he knew his rules passably, he had little finish in
composition. It was the cure of his village who had taught
him his first Latin; his parents, from motives of economy,
having sent him to school as late as possible.
His father, Monsieur Charles Denis Bartolome Bovary,
retired assistant-surgeon-major, compromised about 1812
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CHAPTER TWO
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rose. A boy was to be sent to meet him, and show him the
way to the farm, and open the gates for him.
Towards four o’clock in the morning, Charles, well
wrapped up in his cloak, set out for the Bertaux. Still
sleepy from the warmth of his bed, he let himself be lulled
by the quiet trot of his horse. When it stopped of its own
accord in front of those holes surrounded with thorns that
are dug on the margin of furrows, Charles awoke with a
start, suddenly remembered the broken leg, and tried to
call to mind all the fractures he knew. The rain had
stopped, day was breaking, and on the branches of the
leafless trees birds roosted motionless, their little feathers
bristling in the cold morning wind. The flat country
stretched as far as eye could see, and the tufts of trees
round the farms at long intervals seemed like dark violet
stains on the cast grey surface, that on the horizon faded
into the gloom of the sky.
Charles from time to time opened his eyes, his mind
grew weary, and, sleep coming upon him, he soon fell
into a doze wherein, his recent sensations blending with
memories, he became conscious of a double self, at once
student and married man, lying in his bed as but now, and
crossing the operation theatre as of old. The warm smell of
poultices mingled in his brain with the fresh odour of
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sew some pads. As she was a long time before she found
her work-case, her father grew impatient; she did not
answer, but as she sewed she pricked her fingers, which
she then put to her mouth to suck them. Charles was
surprised at the whiteness of her nails. They were shiny,
delicate at the tips, more polished than the ivory of
Dieppe, and almond-shaped. Yet her hand was not
beautiful, perhaps not white enough, and a little hard at
the knuckles; besides, it was too long, with no soft
inflections in the outlines. Her real beauty was in her eyes.
Although brown, they seemed black because of the lashes,
and her look came at you frankly, with a candid boldness.
The bandaging over, the doctor was invited by
Monsieur Rouault himself to ‘pick a bit’ before he left.
Charles went down into the room on the ground floor.
Knives and forks and silver goblets were laid for two on a
little table at the foot of a huge bed that had a canopy of
printed cotton with figures representing Turks. There was
an odour of iris-root and damp sheets that escaped from a
large oak chest opposite the window. On the floor in
corners were sacks of flour stuck upright in rows. These
were the overflow from the neighbouring granary, to
which three stone steps led. By way of decoration for the
apartment, hanging to a nail in the middle of the wall,
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CHAPTER THREE
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all of us, one must not give way altogether, and, because
others have died, want to die too. You must pull yourself
together, Monsieur Bovary. It will pass away. Come to see
us; my daughter thinks of you now and again, d’ye know,
and she says you are forgetting her. Spring will soon be
here. We’ll have some rabbit-shooting in the warrens to
amuse you a bit.’
Charles followed his advice. He went back to the
Bertaux. He found all as he had left it, that is to say, as it
was five months ago. The pear trees were already in
blossom, and Farmer Rouault, on his legs again, came and
went, making the farm more full of life.
Thinking it his duty to heap the greatest attention upon
the doctor because of his sad position, he begged him not
to take his hat off, spoke to him in an undertone as if he
had been ill, and even pretended to be angry because
nothing rather lighter had been prepared for him than for
the others, such as a little clotted cream or stewed pears.
He told stories. Charles found himself laughing, but the
remembrance of his wife suddenly coming back to him
depressed him. Coffee was brought in; he thought no
more about her.
He thought less of her as he grew accustomed to living
alone. The new delight of independence soon made his
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seen her the first time, or as he had just left her. Then he
asked himself what would become of her—if she would be
married, and to whom! Alas! Old Rouault was rich, and
she!—so beautiful! But Emma’s face always rose before his
eyes, and a monotone, like the humming of a top,
sounded in his ears, ‘If you should marry after all! If you
should marry!’ At night he could not sleep; his throat was
parched; he was athirst. He got up to drink from the
water-bottle and opened the window. The night was
covered with stars, a warm wind blowing in the distance;
the dogs were barking. He turned his head towards the
Bertaux.
Thinking that, after all, he should lose nothing, Charles
promised himself to ask her in marriage as soon as occasion
offered, but each time such occasion did offer the fear of
not finding the right words sealed his lips.
Old Rouault would not have been sorry to be rid of his
daughter, who was of no use to him in the house. In his
heart he excused her, thinking her too clever for farming,
a calling under the ban of Heaven, since one never saw a
millionaire in it. Far from having made a fortune by it, the
good man was losing every year; for if he was good in
bargaining, in which he enjoyed the dodges of the trade,
on the other hand, agriculture properly so called, and the
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the wall; the shutter had been thrown back; the hook was
still swinging.
The next day by nine o’clock he was at the farm.
Emma blushed as he entered, and she gave a little forced
laugh to keep herself in countenance. Old Rouault
embraced his future son-in-law. The discussion of money
matters was put off; moreover, there was plenty of time
before them, as the marriage could not decently take place
till Charles was out of mourning, that is to say, about the
spring of the next year.
The winter passed waiting for this. Mademoiselle
Rouault was busy with her trousseau. Part of it was
ordered at Rouen, and she made herself chemises and
nightcaps after fashion-plates that she borrowed. When
Charles visited the farmer, the preparations for the
wedding were talked over; they wondered in what room
they should have dinner; they dreamed of the number of
dishes that would be wanted, and what should be entrees.
Emma would, on the contrary, have preferred to have a
midnight wedding with torches, but old Rouault could
not understand such an idea. So there was a wedding at
which forty-three persons were present, at which they
remained sixteen hours at table, began again the next day,
and to some extent on the days following.
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CHAPTER FOUR
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from time to time in his breast. How long ago it all was!
Their son would have been thirty by now. Then he
looked back and saw nothing on the road. He felt dreary
as an empty house; and tender memories mingling with
the sad thoughts in his brain, addled by the fumes of the
feast, he felt inclined for a moment to take a turn towards
the church. As he was afraid, however, that this sight
would make him yet more sad, he went right away home.
Monsieur and Madame Charles arrived at Tostes about
six o’clock.
The neighbors came to the windows to see their
doctor’s new wife.
The old servant presented herself, curtsied to her,
apologised for not having dinner ready, and suggested that
madame, in the meantime, should look over her house.
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CHAPTER FIVE
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centre, grew paler towards the surface of the eye. His own
eyes lost themselves in these depths; he saw himself in
miniature down to the shoulders, with his handkerchief
round his head and the top of his shirt open. He rose. She
came to the window to see him off, and stayed leaning on
the sill between two pots of geranium, clad in her dressing
gown hanging loosely about her. Charles, in the street
buckled his spurs, his foot on the mounting stone, while
she talked to him from above, picking with her mouth
some scrap of flower or leaf that she blew out at him.
Then this, eddying, floating, described semicircles in the
air like a bird, and was caught before it reached the
ground in the ill-groomed mane of the old white mare
standing motionless at the door. Charles from horseback
threw her a kiss; she answered with a nod; she shut the
window, and he set off. And then along the highroad,
spreading out its long ribbon of dust, along the deep lanes
that the trees bent over as in arbours, along paths where
the corn reached to the knees, with the sun on his back
and the morning air in his nostrils, his heart full of the joys
of the past night, his mind at rest, his flesh at ease, he went
on, re-chewing his happiness, like those who after dinner
taste again the truffles which they are digesting.
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Until now what good had he had of his life? His time
at school, when he remained shut up within the high
walls, alone, in the midst of companions richer than he or
cleverer at their work, who laughed at his accent, who
jeered at his clothes, and whose mothers came to the
school with cakes in their muffs? Later on, when he
studied medicine, and never had his purse full enough to
treat some little work-girl who would have become his
mistress? Afterwards, he had lived fourteen months with
the widow, whose feet in bed were cold as icicles. But
now he had for life this beautiful woman whom he
adored. For him the universe did not extend beyond the
circumference of her petticoat, and he reproached himself
with not loving her. He wanted to see her again; he
turned back quickly, ran up the stairs with a beating heart.
Emma, in her room, was dressing; he came up on tiptoe,
kissed her back; she gave a cry.
He could not keep from constantly touching her comb,
her ring, her fichu; sometimes he gave her great sounding
kisses with all his mouth on her cheeks, or else little kisses
in a row all along her bare arm from the tip of her fingers
up to her shoulder, and she put him away half-smiling,
half-vexed, as you do a child who hangs about you.
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CHAPTER SIX
She had read ‘Paul and Virginia,’ and she had dreamed
of the little bamboo-house, the nigger Domingo, the dog
Fiddle, but above all of the sweet friendship of some dear
little brother, who seeks red fruit for you on trees taller
than steeples, or who runs barefoot over the sand, bringing
you a bird’s nest.
When she was thirteen, her father himself took her to
town to place her in the convent. They stopped at an inn
in the St. Gervais quarter, where, at their supper, they
used painted plates that set forth the story of Mademoiselle
de la Valliere. The explanatory legends, chipped here and
there by the scratching of knives, all glorified religion, the
tendernesses of the heart, and the pomps of court.
Far from being bored at first at the convent, she took
pleasure in the society of the good sisters, who, to amuse
her, took her to the chapel, which one entered from the
refectory by a long corridor. She played very little during
recreation hours, knew her catechism well, and it was she
who always answered Monsieur le Vicaire’s difficult
questions. Living thus, without every leaving the warm
atmosphere of the classrooms, and amid these pale-faced
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poesy; and now she could not think that the calm in
which she lived was the happiness she had dreamed.
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CHAPTER SEVEN
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CHAPTER EIGHT
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‘Yes!’
‘Why, you must be mad! They would make fun of
you; keep your place. Besides, it is more becoming for a
doctor,’ she added.
Charles was silent. He walked up and down waiting for
Emma to finish dressing.
He saw her from behind in the glass between two
lights. Her black eyes seemed blacker than ever. Her hair,
undulating towards the ears, shone with a blue lustre; a
rose in her chignon trembled on its mobile stalk, with
artificial dewdrops on the tip of the leaves. She wore a
gown of pale saffron trimmed with three bouquets of
pompon roses mixed with green.
Charles came and kissed her on her shoulder.
‘Let me alone!’ she said; ‘you are tumbling me.’
One could hear the flourish of the violin and the notes
of a horn. She went downstairs restraining herself from
running.
Dancing had begun. Guests were arriving. There was
some crushing.
She sat down on a form near the door.
The quadrille over, the floor was occupied by groups of
men standing up and talking and servants in livery bearing
large trays. Along the line of seated women painted fans
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and parted; the same eyes falling before you met yours
again.
A few men (some fifteen or so), of twenty-five to forty,
scattered here and there among the dancers or talking at
the doorways, distinguished themselves from the crowd by
a certain air of breeding, whatever their differences in age,
dress, or face.
Their clothes, better made, seemed of finer cloth, and
their hair, brought forward in curls towards the temples,
glossy with more delicate pomades. They had the
complexion of wealth—that clear complexion that is
heightened by the pallor of porcelain, the shimmer of
satin, the veneer of old furniture, and that an ordered
regimen of exquisite nurture maintains at its best. Their
necks moved easily in their low cravats, their long
whiskers fell over their turned-down collars, they wiped
their lips upon handkerchiefs with embroidered initials
that gave forth a subtle perfume. Those who were
beginning to grow old had an air of youth, while there
was something mature in the faces of the young. In their
unconcerned looks was the calm of passions daily satiated,
and through all their gentleness of manner pierced that
peculiar brutality, the result of a command of half-easy
things, in which force is exercised and vanity amused—the
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anything about it, and it was with a deep sigh of relief that
he pulled off his boots.
Emma threw a shawl over her shoulders, opened the
window, and leant out.
The night was dark; some drops of rain were falling.
She breathed in the damp wind that refreshed her eyelids.
The music of the ball was still murmuring in her ears. And
she tried to keep herself awake in order to prolong the
illusion that this luxurious life that she would soon have to
give up.
Day began to break. She looked long at the windows
of the chateau, trying to guess which were the rooms of all
those she had noticed the evening before. She would fain
have known their lives, have penetrated, blended with
them. But she was shivering with cold. She undressed, and
cowered down between the sheets against Charles, who
was asleep.
There were a great many people to luncheon. The
repast lasted ten minutes; no liqueurs were served, which
astonished the doctor.
Next, Mademoiselle d’Andervilliers collected some
pieces of roll in a small basket to take them to the swans
on the ornamental waters, and they went to walk in the
hot-houses, where strange plants, bristling with hairs, rose
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CHAPTER NINE
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eyes. But she was angered with shame; she felt a wild
desire to strike him; she went to open the window in the
passage and breathed in the fresh air to calm herself.
‘What a man! What a man!’ she said in a low voice,
biting her lips.
Besides, she was becoming more irritated with him. As
he grew older his manner grew heavier; at dessert he cut
the corks of the empty bottles; after eating he cleaned his
teeth with his tongue; in taking soup he made a gurgling
noise with every spoonful; and, as he was getting fatter,
the puffed-out cheeks seemed to push the eyes, always
small, up to the temples.
Sometimes Emma tucked the red borders of his under-
vest unto his waistcoat, rearranged his cravat, and threw
away the dirty gloves he was going to put on; and this was
not, as he fancied, for himself; it was for herself, by a
diffusion of egotism, of nervous irritation. Sometimes, too,
she told him of what she had read, such as a passage in a
novel, of a new play, or an anecdote of the ‘upper ten’
that she had seen in a feuilleton; for, after all, Charles was
something, an ever-open ear, and ever-ready approbation.
She confided many a thing to her greyhound. She would
have done so to the logs in the fireplace or to the
pendulum of the clock.
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and immoral, all of which made her husband open his eyes
widely.
Would this misery last for ever? Would she never issue
from it? Yet she was as good as all the women who were
living happily. She had seen duchesses at Vaubyessard with
clumsier waists and commoner ways, and she execrated
the injustice of God. She leant her head against the walls
to weep; she envied lives of stir; longed for masked balls,
for violent pleasures, with all the wildness that she did not
know, but that these must surely yield.
She grew pale and suffered from palpitations of the
heart.
Charles prescribed valerian and camphor baths.
Everything that was tried only seemed to irritate her the
more.
On certain days she chatted with feverish rapidity, and
this over-excitement was suddenly followed by a state of
torpor, in which she remained without speaking, without
moving. What then revived her was pouring a bottle of
eau-de-cologne over her arms.
As she was constantly complaining about Tostes,
Charles fancied that her illness was no doubt due to some
local cause, and fixing on this idea, began to think
seriously of setting up elsewhere.
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Part II
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CHAPTER TWO
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CHAPTER THREE
The next day, as she was getting up, she saw the clerk
on the Place. She had on a dressing-gown. He looked up
and bowed. She nodded quickly and reclosed the window.
Leon waited all day for six o’clock in the evening to
come, but on going to the inn, he found no one but
Monsieur Binet, already at table. The dinner of the
evening before had been a considerable event for him; he
had never till then talked for two hours consecutively to a
‘lady.’ How then had he been able to explain, and in such
language, the number of things that he could not have said
so well before? He was usually shy, and maintained that
reserve which partakes at once of modesty and
dissimulation.
At Yonville he was considered ‘well-bred.’ He listened
to the arguments of the older people, and did not seem
hot about politics—a remarkable thing for a young man.
Then he had some accomplishments; he painted in water-
colours, could read the key of G, and readily talked
literature after dinner when he did not play cards.
Monsieur Homais respected him for his education;
Madame Homais liked him for his good-nature, for he
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see the procurer of the king in his own private room; the
magistrate receiving him standing up, ermine on shoulder
and cap on head. It was in the morning, before the court
opened. In the corridors one heard the heavy boots of the
gendarmes walking past, and like a far-off noise great locks
that were shut. The druggist’s ears tingled as if he were
about to have an apoplectic stroke; he saw the depths of
dungeons, his family in tears, his shop sold, all the jars
dispersed; and he was obliged to enter a cafe and take a
glass of rum and seltzer to recover his spirits.
Little by little the memory of this reprimand grew
fainter, and he continued, as heretofore, to give anodyne
consultations in his back-parlour. But the mayor resented
it, his colleagues were jealous, everything was to be feared;
gaining over Monsieur Bovary by his attentions was to
earn his gratitude, and prevent his speaking out later on,
should he notice anything. So every morning Homais
brought him ‘the paper,’ and often in the afternoon left his
shop for a few moments to have a chat with the Doctor.
Charles was dull: patients did not come. He remained
seated for hours without speaking, went into his
consulting room to sleep, or watched his wife sewing.
Then for diversion he employed himself at home as a
workman; he even tried to do up the attic with some paint
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lady Berthe; from that moment this name was chosen; and
as old Rouault could not come, Monsieur Homais was
requested to stand godfather. His gifts were all products
from his establishment, to wit: six boxes of jujubes, a
whole jar of racahout, three cakes of marshmallow paste,
and six sticks of sugar-candy into the bargain that he had
come across in a cupboard. On the evening of the
ceremony there was a grand dinner; the cure was present;
there was much excitement. Monsieur Homais towards
liqueur-time began singing ‘Le Dieu des bonnes gens.’
Monsieur Leon sang a barcarolle, and Madame Bovary,
senior, who was godmother, a romance of the time of the
Empire; finally, M. Bovary, senior, insisted on having the
child brought down, and began baptizing it with a glass of
champagne that he poured over its head. This mockery of
the first of the sacraments made the Abbe Bournisien
angry; old Bovary replied by a quotation from ‘La Guerre
des Dieux"; the cure wanted to leave; the ladies implored,
Homais interfered; and they succeeded in making the
priest sit down again, and he quietly went on with the
half-finished coffee in his saucer.
Monsieur Bovary, senior, stayed at Yonville a month,
dazzling the native by a superb policeman’s cap with silver
tassels that he wore in the morning when he smoked his
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CHAPTER FOUR
When the first cold days set in Emma left her bedroom
for the sitting-room, a long apartment with a low ceiling,
in which there was on the mantelpiece a large bunch of
coral spread out against the looking-glass. Seated in her
arm chair near the window, she could see the villagers pass
along the pavement.
Twice a day Leon went from his office to the Lion
d’Or. Emma could hear him coming from afar; she leant
forward listening, and the young man glided past the
curtain, always dressed in the same way, and without
turning his head. But in the twilight, when, her chin
resting on her left hand, she let the embroidery she had
begun fall on her knees, she often shuddered at the
apparition of this shadow suddenly gliding past. She would
get up and order the table to be laid.
Monsieur Homais called at dinner-time. Skull-cap in
hand, he came in on tiptoe, in order to disturb no one,
always repeating the same phrase, ‘Good evening,
everybody.’ Then, when he had taken his seat at the table
between the pair, he asked the doctor about his patients,
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She heard some steps on the stairs. It was Leon. She got
up and took from the chest of drawers the first pile of
dusters to be hemmed. When he came in she seemed very
busy.
The conversation languished; Madame Bovary gave it
up every few minutes, whilst he himself seemed quite
embarrassed. Seated on a low chair near the fire, he turned
round in his fingers the ivory thimble-case. She stitched
on, or from time to time turned down the hem of the
cloth with her nail. She did not speak; he was silent,
captivated by her silence, as he would have been by her
speech.
‘Poor fellow!’ she thought.
‘How have I displeased her?’ he asked himself.
At last, however, Leon said that he should have, one of
these days, to go to Rouen on some office business.
‘Your music subscription is out; am I to renew it?’
‘No,’ she replied.
‘Why?’
‘Because—‘
And pursing her lips she slowly drew a long stitch of
grey thread.
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But she was eaten up with desires, with rage, with hate.
That dress with the narrow folds hid a distracted fear, of
whose torment those chaste lips said nothing. She was in
love with Leon, and sought solitude that she might with
the more ease delight in his image. The sight of his form
troubled the voluptuousness of this mediation. Emma
thrilled at the sound of his step; then in his presence the
emotion subsided, and afterwards there remained to her
only an immense astonishment that ended in sorrow.
Leon did not know that when he left her in despair she
rose after he had gone to see him in the street. She
concerned herself about his comings and goings; she
watched his face; she invented quite a history to find an
excuse for going to his room. The chemist’s wife seemed
happy to her to sleep under the same roof, and her
thoughts constantly centered upon this house, like the
‘Lion d’Or’ pigeons, who came there to dip their red feet
and white wings in its gutters. But the more Emma
recognised her love, the more she crushed it down, that it
might not be evident, that she might make it less. She
would have liked Leon to guess it, and she imagined
chances, catastrophes that should facilitate this.
What restrained her was, no doubt, idleness and fear,
and a sense of shame also. She thought she had repulsed
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him too much, that the time was past, that all was lost.
Then, pride, and joy of being able to say to herself, ‘I am
virtuous,’ and to look at herself in the glass taking resigned
poses, consoled her a little for the sacrifice she believed she
was making.
Then the lusts of the flesh, the longing for money, and
the melancholy of passion all blended themselves into one
suffering, and instead of turning her thoughts from it, she
clave to it the more, urging herself to pain, and seeking
everywhere occasion for it. She was irritated by an ill-
served dish or by a half-open door; bewailed the velvets
she had not, the happiness she had missed, her too exalted
dreams, her narrow home.
What exasperated her was that Charles did not seem to
notice her anguish. His conviction that he was making her
happy seemed to her an imbecile insult, and his sureness
on this point ingratitude. For whose sake, then was she
virtuous? Was it not for him, the obstacle to all felicity,
the cause of all misery, and, as it were, the sharp clasp of
that complex strap that bucked her in on all sides.
On him alone, then, she concentrated all the various
hatreds that resulted from her boredom, and every effort
to diminish only augmented it; for this useless trouble was
added to the other reasons for despair, and contributed still
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But the cure from time to time looked into the church,
where the kneeling boys were shouldering one another,
and tumbling over like packs of cards.
‘I should like to know—’ she went on.
‘You look out, Riboudet,’ cried the priest in an angry
voice; ‘I’ll warm your ears, you imp!’ Then turning to
Emma, ‘He’s Boudet the carpenter’s son; his parents are
well off, and let him do just as he pleases. Yet he could
learn quickly if he would, for he is very sharp. And so
sometimes for a joke I call him Riboudet (like the road
one takes to go to Maromme) and I even say ‘Mon
Riboudet.’ Ha! Ha! ‘Mont Riboudet.’ The other day I
repeated that just to Monsignor, and he laughed at it; he
condescended to laugh at it. And how is Monsieur
Bovary?’
She seemed not to hear him. And he went on—
‘Always very busy, no doubt; for he and I are certainly
the busiest people in the parish. But he is doctor of the
body,’ he added with a thick laugh, ‘and I of the soul.’
She fixed her pleading eyes upon the priest. ‘Yes,’ she
said, ‘you solace all sorrows.’
‘Ah! don’t talk to me of it, Madame Bovary. This
morning I had to go to Bas-Diauville for a cow that was
ill; they thought it was under a spell. All their cows, I
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‘Ah! that’s true,’ said the other, rubbing his chin with
an air of mingled contempt and satisfaction.
Leon was weary of loving without any result; moreover
he was beginning to feel that depression caused by the
repetition of the same kind of life, when no interest
inspires and no hope sustains it. He was so bored with
Yonville and its inhabitants, that the sight of certain
persons, of certain houses, irritated him beyond
endurance; and the chemist, good fellow though he was,
was becoming absolutely unbearable to him. Yet the
prospect of a new condition of life frightened as much as it
seduced him.
This apprehension soon changed into impatience, and
then Paris from afar sounded its fanfare of masked balls
with the laugh of grisettes. As he was to finish reading
there, why not set out at once? What prevented him? And
he began making home-preparations; he arranged his
occupations beforehand. He furnished in his head an
apartment. He would lead an artist’s life there! He would
take lessons on the guitar! He would have a dressing-
gown, a Basque cap, blue velvet slippers! He even already
was admiring two crossed foils over his chimney-piece,
with a death’s head on the guitar above them.
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the wind like dead boughs, her sterile virtue, her lost
hopes, the domestic tete-a-tete—she gathered it all up,
took everything, and made it all serve as fuel for her
melancholy.
The flames, however, subsided, either because the
supply had exhausted itself, or because it had been piled up
too much. Love, little by little, was quelled by absence;
regret stifled beneath habit; and this incendiary light that
had empurpled her pale sky was overspread and faded by
degrees. In the supineness of her conscience she even took
her repugnance towards her husband for aspirations
towards her lover, the burning of hate for the warmth of
tenderness; but as the tempest still raged, and as passion
burnt itself down to the very cinders, and no help came,
no sun rose, there was night on all sides, and she was lost
in the terrible cold that pierced her.
Then the evil days of Tostes began again. She thought
herself now far more unhappy; for she had the experience
of grief, with the certainty that it would not end.
A woman who had laid on herself such sacrifices could
well allow herself certain whims. She bought a Gothic
prie-dieu, and in a month spent fourteen francs on lemons
for polishing her nails; she wrote to Rouen for a blue
cashmere gown; she chose one of Lheureux’s finest
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and those of men whose ambition has failed. She was pale
all over, white as a sheet; the skin of her nose was drawn
at the nostrils, her eyes looked at you vaguely. After
discovering three grey hairs on her temples, she talked
much of her old age.
She often fainted. One day she even spat blood, and, as
Charles fussed around her showing his anxiety—
‘Bah!’ she answered, ‘what does it matter?’
Charles fled to his study and wept there, both his
elbows on the table, sitting in an arm-chair at his bureau
under the phrenological head.
Then he wrote to his mother begging her to come, and
they had many long consultations together on the subject
of Emma.
What should they decide? What was to be done since
she rejected all medical treatment? ‘Do you know what
your wife wants?’ replied Madame Bovary senior.
‘She wants to be forced to occupy herself with some
manual work. If she were obliged, like so many others, to
earn her living, she wouldn’t have these vapours, that
come to her from a lot of ideas she stuffs into her head,
and from the idleness in which she lives.
Yet she is always busy,’ said Charles.
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And she protested that she was not mocking him, when
the report of a cannon resounded. Immediately all began
hustling one another pell-mell towards the village.
It was a false alarm. The prefect seemed not to be
coming, and the members of the jury felt much
embarrassed, not knowing if they ought to begin the
meeting or still wait.
At last at the end of the Place a large hired landau
appeared, drawn by two thin horses, which a coachman in
a white hat was whipping lustily. Binet had only just time
to shout, ‘Present arms!’ and the colonel to imitate him.
All ran towards the enclosure; everyone pushed forward.
A few even forgot their collars; but the equipage of the
prefect seemed to anticipate the crowd, and the two yoked
jades, trapesing in their harness, came up at a little trot in
front of the peristyle of the town hall at the very moment
when the National Guard and firemen deployed, beating
drums and marking time.
‘Present!’ shouted Binet.
‘Halt!’ shouted the colonel. ‘Left about, march.’
And after presenting arms, during which the clang of
the band, letting loose, rang out like a brass kettle rolling
downstairs, all the guns were lowered. Then was seen
stepping down from the carriage a gentleman in a short
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‘But one must,’ said Emma, ‘to some extent bow to the
opinion of the world and accept its moral code.’
‘Ah! but there are two,’ he replied. ‘The small, the
conventional, that of men, that which constantly changes,
that brays out so loudly, that makes such a commotion
here below, of the earth earthly, like the mass of imbeciles
you see down there. But the other, the eternal, that is
about us and above, like the landscape that surrounds us,
and the blue heavens that give us light.’
Monsieur Lieuvain had just wiped his mouth with a
pocket-handkerchief. He continued—
‘And what should I do here gentlemen, pointing out to
you the uses of agriculture? Who supplies our wants? Who
provides our means of subsistence? Is it not the
agriculturist? The agriculturist, gentlemen, who, sowing
with laborious hand the fertile furrows of the country,
brings forth the corn, which, being ground, is made into a
powder by means of ingenious machinery, comes out
thence under the name of flour, and from there,
transported to our cities, is soon delivered at the baker’s,
who makes it into food for poor and rich alike. Again, is it
not the agriculturist who fattens, for our clothes, his
abundant flocks in the pastures? For how should we clothe
ourselves, how nourish ourselves, without the
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The feast was long, noisy, ill served; the guests were so
crowded that they could hardly move their elbows; and
the narrow planks used for forms almost broke down
under their weight. They ate hugely. Each one stuffed
himself on his own account. Sweat stood on every brow,
and a whitish steam, like the vapour of a stream on an
autumn morning, floated above the table between the
hanging lamps. Rodolphe, leaning against the calico of the
tent was thinking so earnestly of Emma that he heard
nothing. Behind him on the grass the servants were piling
up the dirty plates, his neighbours were talking; he did not
answer them; they filled his glass, and there was silence in
his thoughts in spite of the growing noise. He was
dreaming of what she had said, of the line of her lips; her
face, as in a magic mirror, shone on the plates of the
shakos, the folds of her gown fell along the walls, and days
of love unrolled to all infinity before him in the vistas of
the future.
He saw her again in the evening during the fireworks,
but she was with her husband, Madame Homais, and the
druggist, who was worrying about the danger of stray
rockets, and every moment he left the company to go and
give some advice to Binet.
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It was the first time that Emma had heard such words
spoken to herself, and her pride, like one who reposes
bathed in warmth, expanded softly and fully at this
glowing language.
‘But if I did not come,’ he continued, ‘if I could not
see you, at least I have gazed long on all that surrounds
you. At night-every night-I arose; I came hither; I
watched your house, its glimmering in the moon, the trees
in the garden swaying before your window, and the little
lamp, a gleam shining through the window-panes in the
darkness. Ah! you never knew that there, so near you, so
far from you, was a poor wretch!’
She turned towards him with a sob.
‘Oh, you are good!’ she said.
‘No, I love you, that is all! You do not doubt that! Tell
me—one word—only one word!’
And Rodolphe imperceptibly glided from the footstool
to the ground; but a sound of wooden shoes was heard in
the kitchen, and he noticed the door of the room was not
closed.
‘How kind it would be of you,’ he went on, rising, ‘if
you would humour a whim of mine.’ It was to go over
her house; he wanted to know it; and Madame Bovary
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Rodolphe came to fetch it, and put another there, that she
always found fault with as too short.
One morning, when Charles had gone out before day
break, she was seized with the fancy to see Rodolphe at
once. She would go quickly to La Huchette, stay there an
hour, and be back again at Yonville while everyone was
still asleep. This idea made her pant with desire, and she
soon found herself in the middle of the field, walking with
rapid steps, without looking behind her.
Day was just breaking. Emma from afar recognised her
lover’s house. Its two dove-tailed weathercocks stood out
black against the pale dawn.
Beyond the farmyard there was a detached building that
she thought must be the chateau She entered—it was if
the doors at her approach had opened wide of their own
accord. A large straight staircase led up to the corridor.
Emma raised the latch of a door, and suddenly at the end
of the room she saw a man sleeping. It was Rodolphe. She
uttered a cry.
‘You here? You here?’ he repeated. ‘How did you
manage to come? Ah! your dress is damp.’
‘I love you,’ she answered, throwing her arms about his
neck.
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her teeth the big pipe that lay on the table by the bed,
amongst lemons and pieces of sugar near a bottle of water.
It took them a good quarter of an hour to say goodbye.
Then Emma cried. She would have wished never to leave
Rodolphe. Something stronger than herself forced her to
him; so much so, that one day, seeing her come
unexpectedly, he frowned as one put out.
‘What is the matter with you?’ she said. ‘Are you ill?
Tell me!’
At last he declared with a serious air that her visits were
becoming imprudent—that she was compromising herself.
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the mortars! You’d better fetch some chairs from the little
room; you know very well that the arm-chairs are not to
be taken out of the drawing-room.’
And to put his arm-chair back in its place he was
darting away from the counter, when Binet asked him for
half an ounce of sugar acid.
‘Sugar acid!’ said the chemist contemptuously, ‘don’t
know it; I’m ignorant of it! But perhaps you want oxalic
acid. It is oxalic acid, isn’t it?’
Binet explained that he wanted a corrosive to make
himself some copperwater with which to remove rust
from his hunting things.
Emma shuddered. The chemist began saying—
‘Indeed the weather is not propitious on account of the
damp.’
‘Nevertheless,’ replied the tax-collector, with a sly
look, ‘there are people who like it.’
She was stifling.
‘And give me—‘
‘Will he never go?’ thought she.
‘Half an ounce of resin and turpentine, four ounces of
yellow wax, and three half ounces of animal charcoal, if
you please, to clean the varnished leather of my togs.’
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crying a little, she gave her back to the servant, who stood
quite thunderstricken at this excess of tenderness.
That evening Rodolphe found her more serious than
usual.
‘That will pass over,’ he concluded; ‘it’s a whim:.’
And he missed three rendezvous running. When he did
come, she showed herself cold and almost contemptuous.
‘Ah! you’re losing your time, my lady!’
And he pretended not to notice her melancholy sighs,
nor the handkerchief she took out.
Then Emma repented. She even asked herself why she
detested Charles; if it had not been better to have been
able to love him? But he gave her no opportunities for
such a revival of sentiment, so that she was much
embarrassed by her desire for sacrifice, when the druggist
came just in time to provide her with an opportunity.
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and Madame Tuvache, the mayor’s wife, did not stir from
her window, such was her impatience to see the operator
arrive.
He came in his gig, which he drove himself. But the
springs of the right side having at length given way
beneath the weight of his corpulence, it happened that the
carriage as it rolled along leaned over a little, and on the
other cushion near him could be seen a large box covered
in red sheep-leather, whose three brass clasps shone
grandly.
After he had entered like a whirlwind the porch of the
‘Lion d’Or,’ the doctor, shouting very loud, ordered them
to unharness his horse. Then he went into the stable to see
that he was eating his oats all right; for on arriving at a
patient’s he first of all looked after his mare and his gig.
People even said about this—
‘Ah! Monsieur Canivet’s a character!’
And he was the more esteemed for this imperturbable
coolness. The universe to the last man might have died,
and he would not have missed the smallest of his habits.
Homais presented himself.
‘I count on you,’ said the doctor. ‘Are we ready? Come
along!’
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was there quite quiet, not even suspecting that the ridicule
of his name would henceforth sully hers as well as his. She
had made efforts to love him, and she had repented with
tears for having yielded to another!
‘But it was perhaps a valgus!’ suddenly exclaimed
Bovary, who was meditating.
At the unexpected shock of this phrase falling on her
thought like a leaden bullet on a silver plate, Emma,
shuddering, raised her head in order to find out what he
meant to say; and they looked at the other in silence,
almost amazed to see each other, so far sundered were
they by their inner thoughts. Charles gazed at her with the
dull look of a drunken man, while he listened motionless
to the last cries of the sufferer, that followed each other in
long-drawn modulations, broken by sharp spasms like the
far-off howling of some beast being slaughtered. Emma bit
her wan lips, and rolling between her fingers a piece of
coral that she had broken, fixed on Charles the burning
glance of her eyes like two arrows of fire about to dart
forth. Everything in him irritated her now; his face, his
dress, what he did not say, his whole person, his existence,
in fine. She repented of her past virtue as of a crime, and
what still remained of it rumbled away beneath the furious
blows of her pride. She revelled in all the evil ironies of
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CHAPTER TWELVE
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young illusions, that had, as soil and rain and winds and
the sun make flowers grow, gradually developed her, and
she at length blossomed forth in all the plenitude of her
nature. Her eyelids seemed chiselled expressly for her long
amorous looks in which the pupil disappeared, while a
strong inspiration expanded her delicate nostrils and raised
the fleshy corner of her lips, shaded in the light by a little
black down. One would have thought that an artist apt in
conception had arranged the curls of hair upon her neck;
they fell in a thick mass, negligently, and with the
changing chances of their adultery, that unbound them
every day. Her voice now took more mellow infections,
her figure also; something subtle and penetrating escaped
even from the folds of her gown and from the line of her
foot. Charles, as when they were first married, thought her
delicious and quite irresistible.
When he came home in the middle of the night, he did
not dare to wake her. The porcelain night-light threw a
round trembling gleam upon the ceiling, and the drawn
curtains of the little cot formed as it were a white hut
standing out in the shade, and by the bedside Charles
looked at them. He seemed to hear the light breathing of
his child. She would grow big now; every season would
bring rapid progress. He already saw her coming from
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‘Yes.’
‘You are forgetting nothing?’
‘No.’
‘Are you sure?’
‘Certainly.’
‘It is at the Hotel de Provence, is it not, that you will
wait for me at midday?’
He nodded.
‘Till to-morrow then!’ said Emma in a last caress; and
she watched him go.
He did not turn round. She ran after him, and, leaning
over the water’s edge between the bulrushes
‘To-morrow!’ she cried.
He was already on the other side of the river and
walking fast across the meadow.
After a few moments Rodolphe stopped; and when he
saw her with her white gown gradually fade away in the
shade like a ghost, he was seized with such a beating of the
heart that he leant against a tree lest he should fall.
‘What an imbecile I am!’ he said with a fearful oath.
‘No matter! She was a pretty mistress!’
And immediately Emma’s beauty, with all the pleasures
of their love, came back to him. For a moment he
softened; then he rebelled against her.
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the walls and that the floor dipped on end like a tossing
boat. She was right at the edge, almost hanging,
surrounded by vast space. The blue of the heavens suffused
her, the air was whirling in her hollow head; she had but
to yield, to let herself be taken; and the humming of the
lathe never ceased, like an angry voice calling her.
‘Emma! Emma!’ cried Charles.
She stopped.
‘Wherever are you? Come!’
The thought that she had just escaped from death
almost made her faint with terror. She closed her eyes;
then she shivered at the touch of a hand on her sleeve; it
was Felicite.
‘Master is waiting for you, madame; the soup is on the
table.’
And she had to go down to sit at table.
She tried to eat. The food choked her. Then she
unfolded her napkin as if to examine the darns, and she
really thought of applying herself to this work, counting
the threads in the linen. Suddenly the remembrance of the
letter returned to her. How had she lost it? Where could
she find it? But she felt such weariness of spirit that she
could not even invent a pretext for leaving the table. Then
she became a coward; she was afraid of Charles; he knew
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her hand to look. She looked far off, as far as she could,
but on the horizon were only great bonfires of grass
smoking on the hills.
‘You will tire yourself, my darling!’ said Bovary. And,
pushing her gently to make her go into the arbour, ‘Sit
down on this seat; you’ll be comfortable.’
‘Oh! no; not there!’ she said in a faltering voice.
She was seized with giddiness, and from that evening
her illness recommenced, with a more uncertain character,
it is true, and more complex symptoms. Now she suffered
in her heart, then in the chest, the head, the limbs; she had
vomitings, in which Charles thought he saw the first signs
of cancer.
And besides this, the poor fellow was worried about
money matters.
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the habit of coming too often to the kitchen with her two
nurslings and her boarder, better off for teeth than a
cannibal. Then she got rid of the Homais family,
successively dismissed all the other visitors, and even
frequented church less assiduously, to the great approval of
the druggist, who said to her in a friendly way—
‘You were going in a bit for the cassock!’
As formerly, Monsieur Bournisien dropped in every
day when he came out after catechism class. He preferred
staying out of doors to taking the air ‘in the grove,’ as he
called the arbour. This was the time when Charles came
home. They were hot; some sweet cider was brought out,
and they drank together to madame’s complete
restoration.
Binet was there; that is to say, a little lower down
against the terrace wall, fishing for crayfish. Bovary invited
him to have a drink, and he thoroughly understood the
uncorking of the stone bottles.
‘You must,’ he said, throwing a satisfied glance all
round him, even to the very extremity of the landscape,
‘hold the bottle perpendicularly on the table, and after the
strings are cut, press up the cork with little thrusts, gently,
gently, as indeed they do seltzer-water at restaurants.’
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with you! let us go! Thine, thine! all my ardour and all my
dreams!’
The curtain fell.
The smell of the gas mingled with that of the breaths,
the waving of the fans, made the air more suffocating.
Emma wanted to go out; the crowd filled the corridors,
and she fell back in her arm-chair with palpitations that
choked her. Charles, fearing that she would faint, ran to
the refreshment-room to get a glass of barley-water.
He had great difficulty in getting back to his seat, for
his elbows were jerked at every step because of the glass he
held in his hands, and he even spilt three-fourths on the
shoulders of a Rouen lady in short sleeves, who feeling the
cold liquid running down to her loins, uttered cries like a
peacock, as if she were being assassinated. Her husband,
who was a millowner, railed at the clumsy fellow, and
while she was with her handkerchief wiping up the stains
from her handsome cherry-coloured taffeta gown, he
angrily muttered about indemnity, costs, reimbursement.
At last Charles reached his wife, saying to her, quite out of
breath—
‘Ma foi! I thought I should have had to stay there.
There is such a crowd—SUCH a crowd!’
He added—
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Part III
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‘If you knew,’ she went on, raising to the ceiling her
beautiful eyes, in which a tear was trembling, ‘all that I
had dreamed!’
‘And I! Oh, I too have suffered! Often I went out; I
went away. I dragged myself along the quays, seeking
distraction amid the din of the crowd without being able
to banish the heaviness that weighed upon me. In an
engraver’s shop on the boulevard there is an Italian print
of one of the Muses. She is draped in a tunic, and she is
looking at the moon, with forget-me-nots in her flowing
hair. Something drove me there continually; I stayed there
hours together.’ Then in a trembling voice, ‘She
resembled you a little.’
Madame Bovary turned away her head that he might
not see the irrepressible smile she felt rising to her lips.
‘Often,’ he went on, ‘I wrote you letters that I tore up.’
She did not answer. He continued—
‘I sometimes fancied that some chance would bring
you. I thought I recognised you at street-corners, and I ran
after all the carriages through whose windows I saw a
shawl fluttering, a veil like yours.’
She seemed resolved to let him go on speaking without
interruption. Crossing her arms and bending down her
face, she looked at the rosettes on her slippers, and at
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‘Sir!’
‘What is it?’
And he recognised the beadle, holding under his arms
and balancing against his stomach some twenty large sewn
volumes. They were works ‘which treated of the
cathedral.’
‘Idiot!’ growled Leon, rushing out of the church.
A lad was playing about the close.
‘Go and get me a cab!’
The child bounded off like a ball by the Rue Quatre-
Vents; then they were alone a few minutes, face to face,
and a little embarrassed.
‘Ah! Leon! Really—I don’t know—if I ought,’ she
whispered. Then with a more serious air, ‘Do you know,
it is very improper—‘
‘How so?’ replied the clerk. ‘It is done at Paris.’
And that, as an irresistible argument, decided her.
Still the cab did not come. Leon was afraid she might
go back into the church. At last the cab appeared.
‘At all events, go out by the north porch,’ cried the
beadle, who was left alone on the threshold, ‘so as to see
the Resurrection, the Last Judgment, Paradise, King
David, and the Condemned in Hell-flames.’
‘Where to, sir?’ asked the coachman.
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recall the slightest details of that past day. But the presence
of her husband and mother-in-law worried her. She
would have liked to hear nothing, to see nothing, so as
not to disturb the meditation on her love, that, do what
she would, became lost in external sensations.
She was unpicking the lining of a dress, and the strips
were scattered around her. Madame Bovary senior was
plying her scissor without looking up, and Charles, in his
list slippers and his old brown surtout that he used as a
dressing-gown, sat with both hands in his pockets, and did
not speak either; near them Berthe, in a little white
pinafore, was raking sand in the walks with her spade.
Suddenly she saw Monsieur Lheureux, the linendraper,
come in through the gate.
He came to offer his services ‘under the sad
circumstances.’ Emma answered that she thought she
could do without. The shopkeeper was not to be beaten.
‘I beg your pardon,’ he said, ‘but I should like to have a
private talk with you.’ Then in a low voice, ‘It’s about
that affair—you know.’
Charles crimsoned to his ears. ‘Oh, yes! certainly.’ And
in his confusion, turning to his wife, ‘Couldn’t you, my
darling?’
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CHAPTER THREE
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kissed behind the poplars; and they would fain, like two
Robinsons, have lived for ever in this little place, which
seemed to them in their beatitude the most magnificent on
earth. It was not the first time that they had seen trees, a
blue sky, meadows; that they had heard the water flowing
and the wind blowing in the leaves; but, no doubt, they
had never admired all this, as if Nature had not existed
before, or had only begun to be beautiful since the
gratification of their desires.
At night they returned. The boat glided along the
shores of the islands. They sat at the bottom, both hidden
by the shade, in silence. The square oars rang in the iron
thwarts, and, in the stillness, seemed to mark time, like the
beating of a metronome, while at the stern the rudder that
trailed behind never ceased its gentle splash against the
water.
Once the moon rose; they did not fail to make fine
phrases, finding the orb melancholy and full of poetry. She
even began to sing—
‘One night, do you remember, we were sailing,’ etc.
Her musical but weak voice died away along the
waves, and the winds carried off the trills that Leon heard
pass like the flapping of wings about him.
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CHAPTER FIVE
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For fear of being seen, she did not usually take the most
direct road. She plunged into dark alleys, and, all
perspiring, reached the bottom of the Rue Nationale, near
the fountain that stands there. It, is the quarter for theatres,
public-houses, and whores. Often a cart would pass near
her, bearing some shaking scenery. Waiters in aprons were
sprinkling sand on the flagstones between green shrubs. It
all smelt of absinthe, cigars, and oysters.
She turned down a street; she recognised him by his
curling hair that escaped from beneath his hat.
Leon walked along the pavement. She followed him to
the hotel. He went up, opened the door, entered—What
an embrace!
Then, after the kisses, the words gushed forth. They
told each other the sorrows of the week, the
presentiments, the anxiety for the letters; but now
everything was forgotten; they gazed into each other’s
faces with voluptuous laughs, and tender names.
The bed was large, of mahogany, in the shape of a boat.
The curtains were in red levantine, that hung from the
ceiling and bulged out too much towards the bell-shaped
bedside; and nothing in the world was so lovely as her
brown head and white skin standing out against this purple
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whim she had had. They were pink satin, bordered with
swansdown. When she sat on his knees, her leg, then too
short, hung in the air, and the dainty shoe, that had no
back to it, was held only by the toes to her bare foot.
He for the first time enjoyed the inexpressible delicacy
of feminine refinements. He had never met this grace of
language, this reserve of clothing, these poses of the weary
dove. He admired the exaltation of her soul and the lace
on her petticoat. Besides, was she not ‘a lady’ and a
married woman—a real mistress, in fine?
By the diversity of her humour, in turn mystical or
mirthful, talkative, taciturn, passionate, careless, she
awakened in him a thousand desires, called up instincts or
memories. She was the mistress of all the novels, the
heroine of all the dramas, the vague ‘she’ of all the
volumes of verse. He found again on her shoulder the
amber colouring of the ‘Odalisque Bathing"; she had the
long waist of feudal chatelaines, and she resembled the
‘Pale Woman of Barcelona.’ But above all she was the
Angel!
Often looking at her, it seemed to him that his soul,
escaping towards her, spread like a wave about the outline
of her head, and descended drawn down into the
whiteness of her breast. He knelt on the ground before
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‘Ah! you too, you will leave me! You will marry! You
will be like all the others.’
He asked, ‘What others?’
‘Why, like all men,’ she replied. Then added, repulsing
him with a languid movement—
‘You are all evil!’
One day, as they were talking philosophically of earthly
disillusions, to experiment on his jealousy, or yielding,
perhaps, to an over-strong need to pour out her heart, she
told him that formerly, before him, she had loved
someone.
‘Not like you,’ she went on quickly, protesting by the
head of her child that ‘nothing had passed between them.’
The young man believed her, but none the less
questioned her to find out what he was.
‘He was a ship’s captain, my dear.’
Was this not preventing any inquiry, and, at the same
time, assuming a higher ground through this pretended
fascination exercised over a man who must have been of
warlike nature and accustomed to receive homage?
The clerk then felt the lowliness of his position; he
longed for epaulettes, crosses, titles. All that would please
her—he gathered that from her spendthrift habits.
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‘It must,’ she replied, ‘have fallen from the old box of
bills that is on the edge of the shelf.’
From that moment her existence was but one long
tissue of lies, in which she enveloped her love as in veils to
hide it. It was a want, a mania, a pleasure carried to such
an extent that if she said she had the day before walked on
the right side of a road, one might know she had taken the
left.
One morning, when she had gone, as usual, rather
lightly clothed, it suddenly began to snow, and as Charles
was watching the weather from the window, he caught
sight of Monsieur Bournisien in the chaise of Monsieur
Tuvache, who was driving him to Rouen. Then he went
down to give the priesta thick shawl that he was to hand
over to Emma as soon as he reached the ‘Croix-Rouge.’
When he got to the inn, Monsieur Bournisien asked for
the wife of the Yonville doctor. The landlady replied that
she very rarely came to her establishment. So that evening,
when he recognised Madame Bovary in the ‘Hirondelle,’
the cure told her his dilemma, without, however,
appearing to attach much importance to it, for he began
praising a preacher who was doing wonders at the
Cathedral, and whom all the ladies were rushing to hear.
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CHAPTER SIX
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‘But when?’
‘Immediately.’
‘It’s a trick,’ said the chemist, when he saw Leon. ‘I
wanted to interrupt this visit, that seemed to me to annoy
you. Let’s go and have a glass of garus at Bridoux’.’
Leon vowed that he must get back to his office. Then
the druggist joked him about quill-drivers and the law.
‘Leave Cujas and Barthole alone a bit. Who the devil
prevents you? Be a man! Let’s go to Bridoux’. You’ll see
his dog. It’s very interesting.’
And as the clerk still insisted—
‘I’ll go with you. I’ll read a paper while I wait for you,
or turn over the leaves of a ‘Code.’’
Leon, bewildered by Emma’s anger, Monsieur Homais’
chatter, and, perhaps, by the heaviness of the luncheon,
was undecided, and, as it were, fascinated by the chemist,
who kept repeating—
‘Let’s go to Bridoux’. It’s just by here, in the Rue
Malpalu.’
Then, through cowardice, through stupidity, through
that indefinable feeling that drags us into the most
distasteful acts, he allowed himself to be led off to
Bridoux’, whom they found in his small yard,
superintending three workmen, who panted as they
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the elm-trees. How calm that time had been! How she
longed for the ineffable sentiments of love that she had
tried to figure to herself out of books! The first month of
her marriage, her rides in the wood, the viscount that
waltzed, and Lagardy singing, all repassed before her eyes.
And Leon suddenly appeared to her as far off as the others.
‘Yet I love him,’ she said to herself.
No matter! She was not happy—she never had been.
Whence came this insufficiency in life—this instantaneous
turning to decay of everything on which she leant? But if
there were somewhere a being strong and beautiful, a
valiant nature, full at once of exaltation and refinement, a
poet’s heart in an angel’s form, a lyre with sounding
chords ringing out elegiac epithalamia to heaven, why,
perchance, should she not find him? Ah! how impossible!
Besides, nothing was worth the trouble of seeking it;
everything was a lie. Every smile hid a yawn of boredom,
every joy a curse, all pleasure satiety, and the sweetest
kisses left upon your lips only the unattainable desire for a
greater delight.
A metallic clang droned through the air, and four
strokes were heard from the convent-clock. Four o’clock!
And it seemed to her that she had been there on that form
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class. Then she was frightened, pushed back her chair, and
cast down her eyes.
The others began to eat; she ate nothing. Her head was
on fire, her eyes smarted, and her skin was ice-cold. In her
head she seemed to feel the floor of the ball-room
rebounding again beneath the rhythmical pulsation of the
thousands of dancing feet. And now the smell of the
punch, the smoke of the cigars, made her giddy. She
fainted, and they carried her to the window.
Day was breaking, and a great stain of purple colour
broadened out in the pale horizon over the St. Catherine
hills. The livid river was shivering in the wind; there was
no one on the bridges; the street lamps were going out.
She revived, and began thinking of Berthe asleep
yonder in the servant’s room. Then a cart filled with long
strips of iron passed by, and made a deafening metallic
vibration against the walls of the houses.
She slipped away suddenly, threw off her costume, told
Leon she must get back, and at last was alone at the Hotel
de Boulogne. Everything, even herself, was now
unbearable to her. She wished that, taking wing like a
bird, she could fly somewhere, far away to regions of
purity, and there grow young again.
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again; for she saw through all his devices, the object of his
kindnesses. What reassured her was the very magnitude of
the sum.
However, by dint of buying and not paying, of
borrowing, signing bills, and renewing these bills that
grew at each new falling-in, she had ended by preparing a
capital for Monsieur Lheureux which he was impatiently
awaiting for his speculations.
She presented herself at his place with an offhand air.
‘You know what has happened to me? No doubt it’s a
joke!’
‘How so?’
He turned away slowly, and, folding his arms, said to
her—
‘My good lady, did you think I should go on to all
eternity being your purveyor and banker, for the love of
God? Now be just. I must get back what I’ve laid out.
Now be just.’
She cried out against the debt.
‘Ah! so much the worse. The court has admitted it.
There’s a judgment. It’s been notified to you. Besides, it
isn’t my fault. It’s Vincart’s.’
‘Could you not—?’
‘Oh, nothing whatever.’
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CHAPTER SEVEN
She was stoical the next day when Maitre Hareng, the
bailiff, with two assistants, presented himself at her house
to draw up the inventory for the distraint.
They began with Bovary’s consulting-room, and did
not write down the phrenological head, which was
considered an ‘instrument of his profession"; but in the
kitchen they counted the plates; the saucepans, the chairs,
the candlesticks, and in the bedroom all the nick-nacks on
the whatnot. They examined her dresses, the linen, the
dressing-room; and her whole existence to its most
intimate details, was, like a corpse on whom a post-
mortem is made, outspread before the eyes of these three
men.
Maitre Hareng, buttoned up in his thin black coat,
wearing a white choker and very tight foot-straps,
repeated from time to time—‘Allow me, madame. You
allow me?’ Often he uttered exclamations. ‘Charming!
very pretty.’ Then he began writing again, dipping his pen
into the horn inkstand in his left hand.
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‘You who know the house through the servant, has the
master spoken sometimes of me?’
‘Yes, you’d do well to go there.’
She dressed, put on her black gown, and her hood with
jet beads, and that she might not be seen (there was still a
crowd on the Place), she took the path by the river,
outside the village.
She reached the notary’s gate quite breathless. The sky
was sombre, and a little snow was falling. At the sound of
the bell, Theodore in a red waistcoat appeared on the
steps; he came to open the door almost familiarly, as to an
acquaintance, and showed her into the dining-room.
A large porcelain stove crackled beneath a cactus that
filled up the niche in the wall, and in black wood frames
against the oak-stained paper hung Steuben’s ‘Esmeralda’
and Schopin’s ‘Potiphar.’ The ready-laid table, the two
silver chafing-dishes, the crystal door-knobs, the parquet
and the furniture, all shone with a scrupulous, English
cleanliness; the windows were ornamented at each corner
with stained glass.
‘Now this,’ thought Emma, ‘is the dining-room I
ought to have.’
The notary came in pressing his palm-leaf dressing-
gown to his breast with his left arm, while with the other
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CHAPTER EIGHT
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deafening music filling all the fields. The earth beneath her
feet was more yielding than the sea, and the furrows
seemed to her immense brown waves breaking into foam.
Everything in her head, of memories, ideas, went off at
once like a thousand pieces of fireworks. She saw her
father, Lheureux’s closet, their room at home, another
landscape. Madness was coming upon her; she grew afraid,
and managed to recover herself, in a confused way, it is
true, for she did not in the, least remember the cause of
the terrible condition she was in, that is to say, the
question of money. She suffered only in her love, and felt
her soul passing from her in this memory; as wounded
men, dying, feel their life ebb from their bleeding wounds.
Night was falling, crows were flying about.
Suddenly it seemed to her that fiery spheres were
exploding in the air like fulminating balls when they
strike, and were whirling, whirling, to melt at last upon
the snow between the branches of the trees. In the midst
of each of them appeared the face of Rodolphe. They
multiplied and drew near her, penetrating, her. It all
disappeared; she recognised the lights of the houses that
shone through the fog.
Now her situation, like an abyss, rose up before her.
She was panting as if her heart would burst. Then in an
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not close her fingers, and the taper, but for Monsieur
Bournisien would have fallen to the ground.
However, she was not quite so pale, and her face had
an expression of serenity as if the sacrament had cured her.
The priest did not fail to point this out; he even
explained to Bovary that the Lord sometimes prolonged
the life of persons when he thought it meet for their
salvation; and Charles remembered the day when, so near
death, she had received the communion. Perhaps there
was no need to despair, he thought.
In fact, she looked around her slowly, as one
awakening from a dream; then in a distinct voice she asked
for her looking-glass, and remained some time bending
over it, until the big tears fell from her eyes. Then she
turned away her head with a sigh and fell back upon the
pillows.
Her chest soon began panting rapidly; the whole of her
tongue protruded from her mouth; her eyes, as they
rolled, grew paler, like the two globes of a lamp that is
going out, so that one might have thought her already
dead but for the fearful labouring of her ribs, shaken by
violent breathing, as if the soul were struggling to free
itself. Felicite knelt down before the crucifix, and the
druggist himself slightly bent his knees, while Monsieur
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the hideous face of the poor wretch that stood out against
the eternal night like a menace.
‘The wind is strong this summer day, Her petticoat has
flown away.’
She fell back upon the mattress in a convulsion. They
all drew near. She was dead.
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CHAPTER NINE
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drawing down the long stiff veil that covered her to her
satin shoes.
Felicite was sobbing—‘Ah! my poor mistress! my poor
mistress!’
‘Look at her,’ said the landlady, sighing; ‘how pretty
she still is! Now, couldn’t you swear she was going to get
up in a minute?’
Then they bent over her to put on her wreath. They
had to raise the head a little, and a rush of black liquid
issued, as if she were vomiting, from her mouth.
‘Oh, goodness! The dress; take care!’ cried Madame
Lefrancois. ‘Now, just come and help,’ she said to the
chemist. ‘Perhaps you’re afraid?’
‘I afraid?’ replied he, shrugging his shoulders. ‘I dare
say! I’ve seen all sorts of things at the hospital when I was
studying pharmacy. We used to make punch in the
dissecting room! Nothingness does not terrify a
philosopher; and, as I often say, I even intend to leave my
body to the hospitals, in order, later on, to serve science.’
The cure on his arrival inquired how Monsieur Bovary
was, and, on the reply of the druggist, went on—‘The
blow, you see, is still too recent.’
Then Homais congratulated him on not being exposed,
like other people, to the loss of a beloved companion;
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than he, went on moving his lips gently for some time,
then insensibly his chin sank down, he let fall his big black
boot, and began to snore.
They sat opposite one another, with protruding
stomachs, puffed-up faces, and frowning looks, after so
much disagreement uniting at last in the same human
weakness, and they moved no more than the corpse by
their side, that seemed to be sleeping.
Charles coming in did not wake them. It was the last
time; he came to bid her farewell.
The aromatic herbs were still smoking, and spirals of
bluish vapour blended at the window-sash with the fog
that was coming in. There were few stars, and the night
was warm. The wax of the candles fell in great drops upon
the sheets of the bed. Charles watched them burn, tiring
his eyes against the glare of their yellow flame.
The watering on the satin gown shimmered white as
moonlight. Emma was lost beneath it; and it seemed to
him that, spreading beyond her own self, she blended
confusedly with everything around her— the silence, the
night, the passing wind, the damp odours rising from the
ground.
Then suddenly he saw her in the garden at Tostes, on a
bench against the thorn hedge, or else at Rouen in the
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the door; the house was thrown open, and the people of
Yonville began to flock round.
Old Rouault arrived, and fainted on the Place when he
saw the black cloth!
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into the manger, and again mounted his nag, whose feet
struck fire as it dashed along.
He said to himself that no doubt they would save her;
the doctors would discover some remedy surely. He
remembered all the miraculous cures he had been told
about. Then she appeared to him dead. She was there;
before his eyes, lying on her back in the middle of the
road. He reined up, and the hallucination disappeared.
At Quincampoix, to give himself heart, he drank three
cups of coffee one after the other. He fancied they had
made a mistake in the name in writing. He looked for the
letter in his pocket, felt it there, but did not dare to open
it.
At last he began to think it was all a joke; someone’s
spite, the jest of some wag; and besides, if she were dead,
one would have known it. But no! There was nothing
extraordinary about the country; the sky was blue, the
trees swayed; a flock of sheep passed. He saw the village;
he was seen coming bending forward upon his horse,
belabouring it with great blows, the girths dripping with
blood.
When he had recovered consciousness, he fell,
weeping, into Bovary’s arms: ‘My girl! Emma! my child!
tell me—‘
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thought of her lying there, and that all was over, that they
would lay her in the earth, he was seized with a fierce,
gloomy, despairful rage. At times he thought he felt
nothing more, and he enjoyed this lull in his pain, whilst
at the same time he reproached himself for being a wretch.
The sharp noise of an iron-ferruled stick was heard on
the stones, striking them at irregular intervals. It came
from the end of the church, and stopped short at the lower
aisles. A man in a coarse brown jacket knelt down
painfully. It was Hippolyte, the stable-boy at the ‘Lion
d’Or.’ He had put on his new leg.
One of the choristers went round the nave making a
collection, and the coppers chinked one after the other on
the silver plate.
‘Oh, make haste! I am in pain!’ cried Bovary, angrily
throwing him a five-franc piece. The churchman thanked
him with a deep bow.
They sang, they knelt, they stood up; it was endless! He
remembered that once, in the early times, they had been
to mass together, and they had sat down on the other side,
on the right, by the wall. The bell began again. There was
a great moving of chairs; the bearers slipped their three
staves under the coffin, and everyone left the church.
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foal running away under the apple-trees: The pure sky was
fretted with rosy clouds; a bluish haze rested upon the cots
covered with iris. Charles as he passed recognised each
courtyard. He remembered mornings like this, when, after
visiting some patient, he came out from one and returned
to her.
The black cloth bestrewn with white beads blew up
from time to time, laying bare the coffin. The tired bearers
walked more slowly, and it advanced with constant jerks,
like a boat that pitches with every wave.
They reached the cemetery. The men went right down
to a place in the grass where a grave was dug. They ranged
themselves all round; and while the priest spoke, the red
soil thrown up at the sides kept noiselessly slipping down
at the corners.
Then when the four ropes were arranged the coffin was
placed upon them. He watched it descend; it seemed
descending for ever. At last a thud was heard; the ropes
creaked as they were drawn up. Then Bournisien took the
spade handed to him by Lestiboudois; with his left hand all
the time sprinkling water, with the right he vigorously
threw in a large spadeful; and the wood of the coffin,
struck by the pebbles, gave forth that dread sound that
seems to us the reverberation of eternity.
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CHAPTER ELEVEN
The next day Charles had the child brought back. She
asked for her mamma. They told her she was away; that
she would bring her back some playthings. Berthe spoke
of her again several times, then at last thought no more of
her. The child’s gaiety broke Bovary’s heart, and he had to
bear besides the intolerable consolations of the chemist.
Money troubles soon began again, Monsieur Lheureux
urging on anew his friend Vincart, and Charles pledged
himself for exorbitant sums; for he would never consent to
let the smallest of the things that had belonged to HER be
sold. His mother was exasperated with him; he grew even
more angry than she did. He had altogether changed. She
left the house.
Then everyone began ‘taking advantage’ of him.
Mademoiselle Lempereur presented a bill for six months’
teaching, although Emma had never taken a lesson (despite
the receipted bill she had shown Bovary); it was an
arrangement between the two women. The man at the
circulating library demanded three years’ subscriptions;
Mere Rollet claimed the postage due for some twenty
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