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<h2> Chapter Five </h2>
<p>The brick front was just in a line with the street, or rather the road.
Behind the door hung a cloak with a small collar, a bridle, and a black
leather cap, and on the floor, in a corner, were a pair of leggings, still
covered with dry mud. On the right was the one apartment, that was both
dining and sitting room. A canary yellow paper, relieved at the top by a
garland of pale flowers, was puckered everywhere over the badly stretched
canvas; white calico curtains with a red border hung crossways at the
length of the window; and on the narrow mantelpiece a clock with a head of
Hippocrates shone resplendent between two plate candlesticks under oval
shades. On the other side of the passage was Charles's consulting room, a
little room about six paces wide, with a table, three chairs, and an
office chair. Volumes of the "Dictionary of Medical Science," uncut, but
the binding rather the worse for the successive sales through which they
had gone, occupied almost along the six shelves of a deal bookcase.</p>
<p>The smell of melted butter penetrated through the walls when he saw
patients, just as in the kitchen one could hear the people coughing in the
consulting room and recounting their histories.</p>
<p>Then, opening on the yard, where the stable was, came a large dilapidated
room with a stove, now used as a wood-house, cellar, and pantry, full of
old rubbish, of empty casks, agricultural implements past service, and a
mass of dusty things whose use it was impossible to guess.</p>
<p>The garden, longer than wide, ran between two mud walls with espaliered
apricots, to a hawthorn hedge that separated it from the field. In the
middle was a slate sundial on a brick pedestal; four flower beds with
eglantines surrounded symmetrically the more useful kitchen garden bed.
Right at the bottom, under the spruce bushes, was a cure in plaster
reading his breviary.</p>
<p>Emma went upstairs. The first room was not furnished, but in the second,
which was their bedroom, was a mahogany bedstead in an alcove with red
drapery. A shell box adorned the chest of drawers, and on the secretary
near the window a bouquet of orange blossoms tied with white satin ribbons
stood in a bottle. It was a bride's bouquet; it was the other one's. She
looked at it. Charles noticed it; he took it and carried it up to the
attic, while Emma seated in an arm-chair (they were putting her things
down around her) thought of her bridal flowers packed up in a bandbox, and
wondered, dreaming, what would be done with them if she were to die.</p>
<p>During the first days she occupied herself in thinking about changes in
the house. She took the shades off the candlesticks, had new wallpaper put
up, the staircase repainted, and seats made in the garden round the
sundial; she even inquired how she could get a basin with a jet fountain
and fishes. Finally her husband, knowing that she liked to drive out,
picked up a second-hand dogcart, which, with new lamps and splashboard in
striped leather, looked almost like a tilbury.</p>
<p>He was happy then, and without a care in the world. A meal together, a
walk in the evening on the highroad, a gesture of her hands over her hair,
the sight of her straw hat hanging from the window-fastener, and many
another thing in which Charles had never dreamed of pleasure, now made up
the endless round of his happiness. In bed, in the morning, by her side,
on the pillow, he watched the sunlight sinking into the down on her fair
cheek, half hidden by the lappets of her night-cap. Seen thus closely, her
eyes looked to him enlarged, especially when, on waking up, she opened and
shut them rapidly many times. Black in the shade, dark blue in broad
daylight, they had, as it were, depths of different colours, that, darker
in the 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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>Before marriage she thought herself in love; but the happiness that should
have followed this love not having come, she must, she thought, have been
mistaken. And Emma tried to find out what one meant exactly in life by the
words felicity, passion, rapture, that had seemed to her so beautiful in
books.</p>
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