<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0017" id="link2HCH0017"></SPAN></p>
<h2> Chapter Eight </h2>
<p>At last it came, the famous agricultural show. On the morning of the
solemnity all the inhabitants at their doors were chatting over the
preparations. The pediment of the town hall had been hung with garlands of
ivy; a tent had been erected in a meadow for the banquet; and in the
middle of the Place, in front of the church, a kind of bombarde was to
announce the arrival of the prefect and the names of the successful
farmers who had obtained prizes. The National Guard of Buchy (there was
none at Yonville) had come to join the corps of firemen, of whom Binet was
captain. On that day he wore a collar even higher than usual; and, tightly
buttoned in his tunic, his figure was so stiff and motionless that the
whole vital portion of his person seemed to have descended into his legs,
which rose in a cadence of set steps with a single movement. As there was
some rivalry between the tax-collector and the colonel, both, to show off
their talents, drilled their men separately. One saw the red epaulettes
and the black breastplates pass and re-pass alternately; there was no end
to it, and it constantly began again. There had never been such a display
of pomp. Several citizens had scoured their houses the evening before;
tri-coloured flags hung from half-open windows; all the public-houses were
full; and in the lovely weather the starched caps, the golden crosses, and
the coloured neckerchiefs seemed whiter than snow, shone in the sun, and
relieved with the motley colours the sombre monotony of the frock-coats
and blue smocks. The neighbouring farmers' wives, when they got off their
horses, pulled out the long pins that fastened around them their dresses,
turned up for fear of mud; and the husbands, for their part, in order to
save their hats, kept their handkerchiefs around them, holding one corner
between their teeth.</p>
<p>The crowd came into the main street from both ends of the village. People
poured in from the lanes, the alleys, the houses; and from time to time
one heard knockers banging against doors closing behind women with their
gloves, who were going out to see the fete. What was most admired were two
long lamp-stands covered with lanterns, that flanked a platform on which
the authorities were to sit. Besides this there were against the four
columns of the town hall four kinds of poles, each bearing a small
standard of greenish cloth, embellished with inscriptions in gold letters.</p>
<p>On one was written, "To Commerce"; on the other, "To Agriculture"; on the
third, "To Industry"; and on the fourth, "To the Fine Arts."</p>
<p>But the jubilation that brightened all faces seemed to darken that of
Madame Lefrancois, the innkeeper. Standing on her kitchen-steps she
muttered to herself, "What rubbish! what rubbish! With their canvas booth!
Do they think the prefect will be glad to dine down there under a tent
like a gipsy? They call all this fussing doing good to the place! Then it
wasn't worth while sending to Neufchatel for the keeper of a cookshop! And
for whom? For cowherds! tatterdemalions!"</p>
<p>The druggist was passing. He had on a frock-coat, nankeen trousers, beaver
shoes, and, for a wonder, a hat with a low crown.</p>
<p>"Your servant! Excuse me, I am in a hurry." And as the fat widow asked
where he was going—</p>
<p>"It seems odd to you, doesn't it, I who am always more cooped up in my
laboratory than the man's rat in his cheese."</p>
<p>"What cheese?" asked the landlady.</p>
<p>"Oh, nothing! nothing!" Homais continued. "I merely wished to convey to
you, Madame Lefrancois, that I usually live at home like a recluse.
To-day, however, considering the circumstances, it is necessary—"</p>
<p>"Oh, you're going down there!" she said contemptuously.</p>
<p>"Yes, I am going," replied the druggist, astonished. "Am I not a member of
the consulting commission?"</p>
<p>Mere Lefrancois looked at him for a few moments, and ended by saying with
a smile—</p>
<p>"That's another pair of shoes! But what does agriculture matter to you? Do
you understand anything about it?"</p>
<p>"Certainly I understand it, since I am a druggist—that is to say, a
chemist. And the object of chemistry, Madame Lefrancois, being the
knowledge of the reciprocal and molecular action of all natural bodies, it
follows that agriculture is comprised within its domain. And, in fact, the
composition of the manure, the fermentation of liquids, the analyses of
gases, and the influence of miasmata, what, I ask you, is all this, if it
isn't chemistry, pure and simple?"</p>
<p>The landlady did not answer. Homais went on—</p>
<p>"Do you think that to be an agriculturist it is necessary to have tilled
the earth or fattened fowls oneself? It is necessary rather to know the
composition of the substances in question—the geological strata, the
atmospheric actions, the quality of the soil, the minerals, the waters,
the density of the different bodies, their capillarity, and what not. And
one must be master of all the principles of hygiene in order to direct,
criticize the construction of buildings, the feeding of animals, the diet
of domestics. And, moreover, Madame Lefrancois, one must know botany, be
able to distinguish between plants, you understand, which are the
wholesome and those that are deleterious, which are unproductive and which
nutritive, if it is well to pull them up here and re-sow them there, to
propagate some, destroy others; in brief, one must keep pace with science
by means of pamphlets and public papers, be always on the alert to find
out improvements."</p>
<p>The landlady never took her eyes off the "Cafe Francois" and the chemist
went on—</p>
<p>"Would to God our agriculturists were chemists, or that at least they
would pay more attention to the counsels of science. Thus lately I myself
wrote a considerable tract, a memoir of over seventy-two pages, entitled,
'Cider, its Manufacture and its Effects, together with some New
Reflections on the Subject,' that I sent to the Agricultural Society of
Rouen, and which even procured me the honour of being received among its
members—Section, Agriculture; Class, Pomological. Well, if my work
had been given to the public—" But the druggist stopped, Madame
Lefrancois seemed so preoccupied.</p>
<p>"Just look at them!" she said. "It's past comprehension! Such a cookshop
as that!" And with a shrug of the shoulders that stretched out over her
breast the stitches of her knitted bodice, she pointed with both hands at
her rival's inn, whence songs were heard issuing. "Well, it won't last
long," she added. "It'll be over before a week."</p>
<p>Homais drew back with stupefaction. She came down three steps and
whispered in his ear—</p>
<p>"What! you didn't know it? There is to be an execution in next week. It's
Lheureux who is selling him out; he has killed him with bills."</p>
<p>"What a terrible catastrophe!" cried the druggist, who always found
expressions in harmony with all imaginable circumstances.</p>
<p>Then the landlady began telling him the story that she had heard from
Theodore, Monsieur Guillaumin's servant, and although she detested
Tellier, she blamed Lheureux. He was "a wheedler, a sneak."</p>
<p>"There!" she said. "Look at him! he is in the market; he is bowing to
Madame Bovary, who's got on a green bonnet. Why, she's taking Monsieur
Boulanger's arm."</p>
<p>"Madame Bovary!" exclaimed Homais. "I must go at once and pay her my
respects. Perhaps she'll be very glad to have a seat in the enclosure
under the peristyle." And, without heeding Madame Lefrancois, who was
calling him back to tell him more about it, the druggist walked off
rapidly with a smile on his lips, with straight knees, bowing copiously to
right and left, and taking up much room with the large tails of his
frock-coat that fluttered behind him in the wind.</p>
<p>Rodolphe, having caught sight of him from afar, hurried on, but Madame
Bovary lost her breath; so he walked more slowly, and, smiling at her,
said in a rough tone—</p>
<p>"It's only to get away from that fat fellow, you know, the druggist." She
pressed his elbow.</p>
<p>"What's the meaning of that?" he asked himself. And he looked at her out
of the corner of his eyes.</p>
<p>Her profile was so calm that one could guess nothing from it. It stood out
in the light from the oval of her bonnet, with pale ribbons on it like the
leaves of weeds. Her eyes with their long curved lashes looked straight
before her, and though wide open, they seemed slightly puckered by the
cheek-bones, because of the blood pulsing gently under the delicate skin.
A pink line ran along the partition between her nostrils. Her head was
bent upon her shoulder, and the pearl tips of her white teeth were seen
between her lips.</p>
<p>"Is she making fun of me?" thought Rodolphe.</p>
<p>Emma's gesture, however, had only been meant for a warning; for Monsieur
Lheureux was accompanying them, and spoke now and again as if to enter
into the conversation.</p>
<p>"What a superb day! Everybody is out! The wind is east!"</p>
<p>And neither Madame Bovary nor Rodolphe answered him, whilst at the
slightest movement made by them he drew near, saying, "I beg your pardon!"
and raised his hat.</p>
<p>When they reached the farrier's house, instead of following the road up to
the fence, Rodolphe suddenly turned down a path, drawing with him Madame
Bovary. He called out—</p>
<p>"Good evening, Monsieur Lheureux! See you again presently."</p>
<p>"How you got rid of him!" she said, laughing.</p>
<p>"Why," he went on, "allow oneself to be intruded upon by others? And as
to-day I have the happiness of being with you—"</p>
<p>Emma blushed. He did not finish his sentence. Then he talked of the fine
weather and of the pleasure of walking on the grass. A few daisies had
sprung up again.</p>
<p>"Here are some pretty Easter daisies," he said, "and enough of them to
furnish oracles to all the amorous maids in the place."</p>
<p>He added, "Shall I pick some? What do you think?"</p>
<p>"Are you in love?" she asked, coughing a little.</p>
<p>"H'm, h'm! who knows?" answered Rodolphe.</p>
<p>The meadow began to fill, and the housewives hustled you with their great
umbrellas, their baskets, and their babies. One had often to get out of
the way of a long file of country folk, servant-maids with blue stockings,
flat shoes, silver rings, and who smelt of milk, when one passed close to
them. They walked along holding one another by the hand, and thus they
spread over the whole field from the row of open trees to the banquet
tent.</p>
<p>But this was the examination time, and the farmers one after the other
entered a kind of enclosure formed by a long cord supported on sticks.</p>
<p>The beasts were there, their noses towards the cord, and making a confused
line with their unequal rumps. Drowsy pigs were burrowing in the earth
with their snouts, calves were bleating, lambs baaing; the cows, on knees
folded in, were stretching their bellies on the grass, slowly chewing the
cud, and blinking their heavy eyelids at the gnats that buzzed round them.
Plough-men with bare arms were holding by the halter prancing stallions
that neighed with dilated nostrils looking towards the mares. These stood
quietly, stretching out their heads and flowing manes, while their foals
rested in their shadow, or now and then came and sucked them. And above
the long undulation of these crowded animals one saw some white mane
rising in the wind like a wave, or some sharp horns sticking out, and the
heads of men running about. Apart, outside the enclosure, a hundred paces
off, was a large black bull, muzzled, with an iron ring in its nostrils,
and who moved no more than if he had been in bronze. A child in rags was
holding him by a rope.</p>
<p>Between the two lines the committee-men were walking with heavy steps,
examining each animal, then consulting one another in a low voice. One who
seemed of more importance now and then took notes in a book as he walked
along. This was the president of the jury, Monsieur Derozerays de la
Panville. As soon as he recognised Rodolphe he came forward quickly, and
smiling amiably, said—</p>
<p>"What! Monsieur Boulanger, you are deserting us?"</p>
<p>Rodolphe protested that he was just coming. But when the president had
disappeared—</p>
<p>"Ma foi!*" said he, "I shall not go. Your company is better than his."</p>
<p>*Upon my word!<br/></p>
<p>And while poking fun at the show, Rodolphe, to move about more easily,
showed the gendarme his blue card, and even stopped now and then in front
of some fine beast, which Madame Bovary did not at all admire. He noticed
this, and began jeering at the Yonville ladies and their dresses; then he
apologised for the negligence of his own. He had that incongruity of
common and elegant in which the habitually vulgar think they see the
revelation of an eccentric existence, of the perturbations of sentiment,
the tyrannies of art, and always a certain contempt for social
conventions, that seduces or exasperates them. Thus his cambric shirt with
plaited cuffs was blown out by the wind in the opening of his waistcoat of
grey ticking, and his broad-striped trousers disclosed at the ankle
nankeen boots with patent leather gaiters.</p>
<p>These were so polished that they reflected the grass. He trampled on
horses's dung with them, one hand in the pocket of his jacket and his
straw hat on one side.</p>
<p>"Besides," added he, "when one lives in the country—"</p>
<p>"It's waste of time," said Emma.</p>
<p>"That is true," replied Rodolphe. "To think that not one of these people
is capable of understanding even the cut of a coat!"</p>
<p>Then they talked about provincial mediocrity, of the lives it crushed, the
illusions lost there.</p>
<p>"And I too," said Rodolphe, "am drifting into depression."</p>
<p>"You!" she said in astonishment; "I thought you very light-hearted."</p>
<p>"Ah! yes. I seem so, because in the midst of the world I know how to wear
the mask of a scoffer upon my face; and yet, how many a time at the sight
of a cemetery by moonlight have I not asked myself whether it were not
better to join those sleeping there!"</p>
<p>"Oh! and your friends?" she said. "You do not think of them."</p>
<p>"My friends! What friends? Have I any? Who cares for me?" And he
accompanied the last words with a kind of whistling of the lips.</p>
<p>But they were obliged to separate from each other because of a great pile
of chairs that a man was carrying behind them. He was so overladen with
them that one could only see the tips of his wooden shoes and the ends of
his two outstretched arms. It was Lestiboudois, the gravedigger, who was
carrying the church chairs about amongst the people. Alive to all that
concerned his interests, he had hit upon this means of turning the show to
account; and his idea was succeeding, for he no longer knew which way to
turn. In fact, the villagers, who were hot, quarreled for these seats,
whose straw smelt of incense, and they leant against the thick backs,
stained with the wax of candles, with a certain veneration.</p>
<p>Madame Bovary again took Rodolphe's arm; he went on as if speaking to
himself—</p>
<p>"Yes, I have missed so many things. Always alone! Ah! if I had some aim in
life, if I had met some love, if I had found someone! Oh, how I would have
spent all the energy of which I am capable, surmounted everything,
overcome everything!"</p>
<p>"Yet it seems to me," said Emma, "that you are not to be pitied."</p>
<p>"Ah! you think so?" said Rodolphe.</p>
<p>"For, after all," she went on, "you are free—" she hesitated, "rich—"</p>
<p>"Do not mock me," he replied.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>"Present!" shouted Binet.</p>
<p>"Halt!" shouted the colonel. "Left about, march."</p>
<p>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 coat with silver braiding, with bald brow, and wearing a tuft of
hair at the back of his head, of a sallow complexion and the most benign
appearance. His eyes, very large and covered by heavy lids, were
half-closed to look at the crowd, while at the same time he raised his
sharp nose, and forced a smile upon his sunken mouth. He recognised the
mayor by his scarf, and explained to him that the prefect was not able to
come. He himself was a councillor at the prefecture; then he added a few
apologies. Monsieur Tuvache answered them with compliments; the other
confessed himself nervous; and they remained thus, face to face, their
foreheads almost touching, with the members of the jury all round, the
municipal council, the notable personages, the National Guard and the
crowd. The councillor pressing his little cocked hat to his breast
repeated his bows, while Tuvache, bent like a bow, also smiled, stammered,
tried to say something, protested his devotion to the monarchy and the
honour that was being done to Yonville.</p>
<p>Hippolyte, the groom from the inn, took the head of the horses from the
coachman, and, limping along with his club-foot, led them to the door of
the "Lion d'Or", where a number of peasants collected to look at the
carriage. The drum beat, the howitzer thundered, and the gentlemen one by
one mounted the platform, where they sat down in red utrecht velvet
arm-chairs that had been lent by Madame Tuvache.</p>
<p>All these people looked alike. Their fair flabby faces, somewhat tanned by
the sun, were the colour of sweet cider, and their puffy whiskers emerged
from stiff collars, kept up by white cravats with broad bows. All the
waist-coats were of velvet, double-breasted; all the watches had, at the
end of a long ribbon, an oval cornelian seal; everyone rested his two
hands on his thighs, carefully stretching the stride of their trousers,
whose unsponged glossy cloth shone more brilliantly than the leather of
their heavy boots.</p>
<p>The ladies of the company stood at the back under the vestibule between
the pillars while the common herd was opposite, standing up or sitting on
chairs. As a matter of fact, Lestiboudois had brought thither all those
that he had moved from the field, and he even kept running back every
minute to fetch others from the church. He caused such confusion with this
piece of business that one had great difficulty in getting to the small
steps of the platform.</p>
<p>"I think," said Monsieur Lheureux to the chemist, who was passing to his
place, "that they ought to have put up two Venetian masts with something
rather severe and rich for ornaments; it would have been a very pretty
effect."</p>
<p>"To be sure," replied Homais; "but what can you expect? The mayor took
everything on his own shoulders. He hasn't much taste. Poor Tuvache! and
he is even completely destitute of what is called the genius of art."</p>
<p>Rodolphe, meanwhile, with Madame Bovary, had gone up to the first floor of
the town hall, to the "council-room," and, as it was empty, he declared
that they could enjoy the sight there more comfortably. He fetched three
stools from the round table under the bust of the monarch, and having
carried them to one of the windows, they sat down by each other.</p>
<p>There was commotion on the platform, long whisperings, much parleying. At
last the councillor got up. They knew now that his name was Lieuvain, and
in the crowd the name was passed from one to the other. After he had
collated a few pages, and bent over them to see better, he began—</p>
<p>"Gentlemen! May I be permitted first of all (before addressing you on the
object of our meeting to-day, and this sentiment will, I am sure, be
shared by you all), may I be permitted, I say, to pay a tribute to the
higher administration, to the government to the monarch, gentle men, our
sovereign, to that beloved king, to whom no branch of public or private
prosperity is a matter of indifference, and who directs with a hand at
once so firm and wise the chariot of the state amid the incessant perils
of a stormy sea, knowing, moreover, how to make peace respected as well as
war, industry, commerce, agriculture, and the fine arts?"</p>
<p>"I ought," said Rodolphe, "to get back a little further."</p>
<p>"Why?" said Emma.</p>
<p>But at this moment the voice of the councillor rose to an extraordinary
pitch. He declaimed—</p>
<p>"This is no longer the time, gentlemen, when civil discord ensanguined our
public places, when the landlord, the business-man, the working-man
himself, falling asleep at night, lying down to peaceful sleep, trembled
lest he should be awakened suddenly by the noise of incendiary tocsins,
when the most subversive doctrines audaciously sapped foundations."</p>
<p>"Well, someone down there might see me," Rodolphe resumed, "then I should
have to invent excuses for a fortnight; and with my bad reputation—"</p>
<p>"Oh, you are slandering yourself," said Emma.</p>
<p>"No! It is dreadful, I assure you."</p>
<p>"But, gentlemen," continued the councillor, "if, banishing from my memory
the remembrance of these sad pictures, I carry my eyes back to the actual
situation of our dear country, what do I see there? Everywhere commerce
and the arts are flourishing; everywhere new means of communication, like
so many new arteries in the body of the state, establish within it new
relations. Our great industrial centres have recovered all their activity;
religion, more consolidated, smiles in all hearts; our ports are full,
confidence is born again, and France breathes once more!"</p>
<p>"Besides," added Rodolphe, "perhaps from the world's point of view they
are right."</p>
<p>"How so?" she asked.</p>
<p>"What!" said he. "Do you not know that there are souls constantly
tormented? They need by turns to dream and to act, the purest passions and
the most turbulent joys, and thus they fling themselves into all sorts of
fantasies, of follies."</p>
<p>Then she looked at him as one looks at a traveller who has voyaged over
strange lands, and went on—</p>
<p>"We have not even this distraction, we poor women!"</p>
<p>"A sad distraction, for happiness isn't found in it."</p>
<p>"But is it ever found?" she asked.</p>
<p>"Yes; one day it comes," he answered.</p>
<p>"And this is what you have understood," said the councillor.</p>
<p>"You, farmers, agricultural labourers! you pacific pioneers of a work that
belongs wholly to civilization! you, men of progress and morality, you
have understood, I say, that political storms are even more redoubtable
than atmospheric disturbances!"</p>
<p>"It comes one day," repeated Rodolphe, "one day suddenly, and when one is
despairing of it. Then the horizon expands; it is as if a voice cried, 'It
is here!' You feel the need of confiding the whole of your life, of giving
everything, sacrificing everything to this being. There is no need for
explanations; they understand one another. They have seen each other in
dreams!"</p>
<p>(And he looked at her.) "In fine, here it is, this treasure so sought
after, here before you. It glitters, it flashes; yet one still doubts, one
does not believe it; one remains dazzled, as if one went out iron darkness
into light."</p>
<p>And as he ended Rodolphe suited the action to the word. He passed his hand
over his face, like a man seized with giddiness. Then he let it fall on
Emma's. She took hers away.</p>
<p>"And who would be surprised at it, gentlemen? He only who is so blind, so
plunged (I do not fear to say it), so plunged in the prejudices of another
age as still to misunderstand the spirit of agricultural populations.
Where, indeed, is to be found more patriotism than in the country, greater
devotion to the public welfare, more intelligence, in a word? And,
gentlemen, I do not mean that superficial intelligence, vain ornament of
idle minds, but rather that profound and balanced intelligence that
applies itself above all else to useful objects, thus contributing to the
good of all, to the common amelioration and to the support of the state,
born of respect for law and the practice of duty—"</p>
<p>"Ah! again!" said Rodolphe. "Always 'duty.' I am sick of the word. They
are a lot of old blockheads in flannel vests and of old women with
foot-warmers and rosaries who constantly drone into our ears 'Duty, duty!'
Ah! by Jove! one's duty is to feel what is great, cherish the beautiful,
and not accept all the conventions of society with the ignominy that it
imposes upon us."</p>
<p>"Yet—yet—" objected Madame Bovary.</p>
<p>"No, no! Why cry out against the passions? Are they not the one beautiful
thing on the earth, the source of heroism, of enthusiasm, of poetry,
music, the arts, of everything, in a word?"</p>
<p>"But one must," said Emma, "to some extent bow to the opinion of the world
and accept its moral code."</p>
<p>"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."</p>
<p>Monsieur Lieuvain had just wiped his mouth with a pocket-handkerchief. He
continued—</p>
<p>"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 agriculturist? And, gentlemen, is it even necessary to go so
far for examples? Who has not frequently reflected on all the momentous
things that we get out of that modest animal, the ornament of
poultry-yards, that provides us at once with a soft pillow for our bed,
with succulent flesh for our tables, and eggs? But I should never end if I
were to enumerate one after the other all the different products which the
earth, well cultivated, like a generous mother, lavishes upon her
children. Here it is the vine, elsewhere the apple tree for cider, there
colza, farther on cheeses and flax. Gentlemen, let us not forget flax,
which has made such great strides of late years, and to which I will more
particularly call your attention."</p>
<p>He had no need to call it, for all the mouths of the multitude were wide
open, as if to drink in his words. Tuvache by his side listened to him
with staring eyes. Monsieur Derozerays from time to time softly closed his
eyelids, and farther on the chemist, with his son Napoleon between his
knees, put his hand behind his ear in order not to lose a syllable. The
chins of the other members of the jury went slowly up and down in their
waistcoats in sign of approval. The firemen at the foot of the platform
rested on their bayonets; and Binet, motionless, stood with out-turned
elbows, the point of his sabre in the air. Perhaps he could hear, but
certainly he could see nothing, because of the visor of his helmet, that
fell down on his nose. His lieutenant, the youngest son of Monsieur
Tuvache, had a bigger one, for his was enormous, and shook on his head,
and from it an end of his cotton scarf peeped out. He smiled beneath it
with a perfectly infantine sweetness, and his pale little face, whence
drops were running, wore an expression of enjoyment and sleepiness.</p>
<p>The square as far as the houses was crowded with people. One saw folk
leaning on their elbows at all the windows, others standing at doors, and
Justin, in front of the chemist's shop, seemed quite transfixed by the
sight of what he was looking at. In spite of the silence Monsieur
Lieuvain's voice was lost in the air. It reached you in fragments of
phrases, and interrupted here and there by the creaking of chairs in the
crowd; then you suddenly heard the long bellowing of an ox, or else the
bleating of the lambs, who answered one another at street corners. In
fact, the cowherds and shepherds had driven their beasts thus far, and
these lowed from time to time, while with their tongues they tore down
some scrap of foliage that hung above their mouths.</p>
<p>Rodolphe had drawn nearer to Emma, and said to her in a low voice,
speaking rapidly—</p>
<p>"Does not this conspiracy of the world revolt you? Is there a single
sentiment it does not condemn? The noblest instincts, the purest
sympathies are persecuted, slandered; and if at length two poor souls do
meet, all is so organised that they cannot blend together. Yet they will
make the attempt; they will flutter their wings; they will call upon each
other. Oh! no matter. Sooner or later, in six months, ten years, they will
come together, will love; for fate has decreed it, and they are born one
for the other."</p>
<p>His arms were folded across his knees, and thus lifting his face towards
Emma, close by her, he looked fixedly at her. She noticed in his eyes
small golden lines radiating from black pupils; she even smelt the perfume
of the pomade that made his hair glossy.</p>
<p>Then a faintness came over her; she recalled the Viscount who had waltzed
with her at Vaubyessard, and his beard exhaled like this air an odour of
vanilla and citron, and mechanically she half-closed her eyes the better
to breathe it in. But in making this movement, as she leant back in her
chair, she saw in the distance, right on the line of the horizon, the old
diligence, the "Hirondelle," that was slowly descending the hill of Leux,
dragging after it a long trail of dust. It was in this yellow carriage
that Leon had so often come back to her, and by this route down there that
he had gone for ever. She fancied she saw him opposite at his windows;
then all grew confused; clouds gathered; it seemed to her that she was
again turning in the waltz under the light of the lustres on the arm of
the Viscount, and that Leon was not far away, that he was coming; and yet
all the time she was conscious of the scent of Rodolphe's head by her
side. This sweetness of sensation pierced through her old desires, and
these, like grains of sand under a gust of wind, eddied to and fro in the
subtle breath of the perfume which suffused her soul. She opened wide her
nostrils several times to drink in the freshness of the ivy round the
capitals. She took off her gloves, she wiped her hands, then fanned her
face with her handkerchief, while athwart the throbbing of her temples she
heard the murmur of the crowd and the voice of the councillor intoning his
phrases. He said—"Continue, persevere; listen neither to the
suggestions of routine, nor to the over-hasty councils of a rash
empiricism.</p>
<p>"Apply yourselves, above all, to the amelioration of the soil, to good
manures, to the development of the equine, bovine, ovine, and porcine
races. Let these shows be to you pacific arenas, where the victor in
leaving it will hold forth a hand to the vanquished, and will fraternise
with him in the hope of better success. And you, aged servants, humble
domestics, whose hard labour no Government up to this day has taken into
consideration, come hither to receive the reward of your silent virtues,
and be assured that the state henceforward has its eye upon you; that it
encourages you, protects you; that it will accede to your just demands,
and alleviate as much as in it lies the burden of your painful
sacrifices."</p>
<p>Monsieur Lieuvain then sat down; Monsieur Derozerays got up, beginning
another speech. His was not perhaps so florid as that of the councillor,
but it recommended itself by a more direct style, that is to say, by more
special knowledge and more elevated considerations. Thus the praise of the
Government took up less space in it; religion and agriculture more. He
showed in it the relations of these two, and how they had always
contributed to civilisation. Rodolphe with Madame Bovary was talking
dreams, presentiments, magnetism. Going back to the cradle of society, the
orator painted those fierce times when men lived on acorns in the heart of
woods. Then they had left off the skins of beasts, had put on cloth,
tilled the soil, planted the vine. Was this a good, and in this discovery
was there not more of injury than of gain? Monsieur Derozerays set himself
this problem. From magnetism little by little Rodolphe had come to
affinities, and while the president was citing Cincinnatus and his plough,
Diocletian, planting his cabbages, and the Emperors of China inaugurating
the year by the sowing of seed, the young man was explaining to the young
woman that these irresistible attractions find their cause in some
previous state of existence.</p>
<p>"Thus we," he said, "why did we come to know one another? What chance
willed it? It was because across the infinite, like two streams that flow
but to unite; our special bents of mind had driven us towards each other."</p>
<p>And he seized her hand; she did not withdraw it.</p>
<p>"For good farming generally!" cried the president.</p>
<p>"Just now, for example, when I went to your house."</p>
<p>"To Monsieur Bizat of Quincampoix."</p>
<p>"Did I know I should accompany you?"</p>
<p>"Seventy francs."</p>
<p>"A hundred times I wished to go; and I followed you—I remained."</p>
<p>"Manures!"</p>
<p>"And I shall remain to-night, to-morrow, all other days, all my life!"</p>
<p>"To Monsieur Caron of Argueil, a gold medal!"</p>
<p>"For I have never in the society of any other person found so complete a
charm."</p>
<p>"To Monsieur Bain of Givry-Saint-Martin."</p>
<p>"And I shall carry away with me the remembrance of you."</p>
<p>"For a merino ram!"</p>
<p>"But you will forget me; I shall pass away like a shadow."</p>
<p>"To Monsieur Belot of Notre-Dame."</p>
<p>"Oh, no! I shall be something in your thought, in your life, shall I not?"</p>
<p>"Porcine race; prizes—equal, to Messrs. Leherisse and Cullembourg,
sixty francs!"</p>
<p>Rodolphe was pressing her hand, and he felt it all warm and quivering like
a captive dove that wants to fly away; but, whether she was trying to take
it away or whether she was answering his pressure; she made a movement
with her fingers. He exclaimed—</p>
<p>"Oh, I thank you! You do not repulse me! You are good! You understand that
I am yours! Let me look at you; let me contemplate you!"</p>
<p>A gust of wind that blew in at the window ruffled the cloth on the table,
and in the square below all the great caps of the peasant women were
uplifted by it like the wings of white butterflies fluttering.</p>
<p>"Use of oil-cakes," continued the president. He was hurrying on: "Flemish
manure-flax-growing-drainage-long leases-domestic service."</p>
<p>Rodolphe was no longer speaking. They looked at one another. A supreme
desire made their dry lips tremble, and wearily, without an effort, their
fingers intertwined.</p>
<p>"Catherine Nicaise Elizabeth Leroux, of Sassetot-la-Guerriere, for
fifty-four years of service at the same farm, a silver medal—value,
twenty-five francs!"</p>
<p>"Where is Catherine Leroux?" repeated the councillor.</p>
<p>She did not present herself, and one could hear voices whispering—</p>
<p>"Go up!"</p>
<p>"Don't be afraid!"</p>
<p>"Oh, how stupid she is!"</p>
<p>"Well, is she there?" cried Tuvache.</p>
<p>"Yes; here she is."</p>
<p>"Then let her come up!"</p>
<p>Then there came forward on the platform a little old woman with timid
bearing, who seemed to shrink within her poor clothes. On her feet she
wore heavy wooden clogs, and from her hips hung a large blue apron. Her
pale face framed in a borderless cap was more wrinkled than a withered
russet apple. And from the sleeves of her red jacket looked out two large
hands with knotty joints, the dust of barns, the potash of washing the
grease of wools had so encrusted, roughened, hardened these that they
seemed dirty, although they had been rinsed in clear water; and by dint of
long service they remained half open, as if to bear humble witness for
themselves of so much suffering endured. Something of monastic rigidity
dignified her face. Nothing of sadness or of emotion weakened that pale
look. In her constant living with animals she had caught their dumbness
and their calm. It was the first time that she found herself in the midst
of so large a company, and inwardly scared by the flags, the drums, the
gentlemen in frock-coats, and the order of the councillor, she stood
motionless, not knowing whether to advance or run away, nor why the crowd
was pushing her and the jury were smiling at her.</p>
<p>Thus stood before these radiant bourgeois this half-century of servitude.</p>
<p>"Approach, venerable Catherine Nicaise Elizabeth Leroux!" said the
councillor, who had taken the list of prize-winners from the president;
and, looking at the piece of paper and the old woman by turns, he repeated
in a fatherly tone—"Approach! approach!"</p>
<p>"Are you deaf?" said Tuvache, fidgeting in his armchair; and he began
shouting in her ear, "Fifty-four years of service. A silver medal!
Twenty-five francs! For you!"</p>
<p>Then, when she had her medal, she looked at it, and a smile of beatitude
spread over her face; and as she walked away they could hear her muttering
"I'll give it to our cure up home, to say some masses for me!"</p>
<p>"What fanaticism!" exclaimed the chemist, leaning across to the notary.</p>
<p>The meeting was over, the crowd dispersed, and now that the speeches had
been read, each one fell back into his place again, and everything into
the old grooves; the masters bullied the servants, and these struck the
animals, indolent victors, going back to the stalls, a green-crown on
their horns.</p>
<p>The National Guards, however, had gone up to the first floor of the town
hall with buns spitted on their bayonets, and the drummer of the battalion
carried a basket with bottles. Madame Bovary took Rodolphe's arm; he saw
her home; they separated at her door; then he walked about alone in the
meadow while he waited for the time of the banquet.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>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.</p>
<p>The pyrotechnic pieces sent to Monsieur Tuvache had, through an excess of
caution, been shut up in his cellar, and so the damp powder would not
light, and the principal set piece, that was to represent a dragon biting
his tail, failed completely. Now and then a meagre Roman-candle went off;
then the gaping crowd sent up a shout that mingled with the cry of the
women, whose waists were being squeezed in the darkness. Emma silently
nestled against Charles's shoulder; then, raising her chin, she watched
the luminous rays of the rockets against the dark sky. Rodolphe gazed at
her in the light of the burning lanterns.</p>
<p>They went out one by one. The stars shone out. A few crops of rain began
to fall. She knotted her fichu round her bare head.</p>
<p>At this moment the councillor's carriage came out from the inn.</p>
<p>His coachman, who was drunk, suddenly dozed off, and one could see from
the distance, above the hood, between the two lanterns, the mass of his
body, that swayed from right to left with the giving of the traces.</p>
<p>"Truly," said the druggist, "one ought to proceed most rigorously against
drunkenness! I should like to see written up weekly at the door of the
town hall on a board ad hoc* the names of all those who during the week
got intoxicated on alcohol. Besides, with regard to statistics, one would
thus have, as it were, public records that one could refer to in case of
need. But excuse me!"</p>
<p>*Specifically for that.<br/></p>
<p>And he once more ran off to the captain. The latter was going back to see
his lathe again.</p>
<p>"Perhaps you would not do ill," Homais said to him, "to send one of your
men, or to go yourself—"</p>
<p>"Leave me alone!" answered the tax-collector. "It's all right!"</p>
<p>"Do not be uneasy," said the druggist, when he returned to his friends.
"Monsieur Binet has assured me that all precautions have been taken. No
sparks have fallen; the pumps are full. Let us go to rest."</p>
<p>"Ma foi! I want it," said Madame Homais, yawning at large. "But never
mind; we've had a beautiful day for our fete."</p>
<p>Rodolphe repeated in a low voice, and with a tender look, "Oh, yes! very
beautiful!"</p>
<p>And having bowed to one another, they separated.</p>
<p>Two days later, in the "Final de Rouen," there was a long article on the
show. Homais had composed it with verve the very next morning.</p>
<p>"Why these festoons, these flowers, these garlands? Whither hurries this
crowd like the waves of a furious sea under the torrents of a tropical sun
pouring its heat upon our heads?"</p>
<p>Then he spoke of the condition of the peasants. Certainly the Government
was doing much, but not enough. "Courage!" he cried to it; "a thousand
reforms are indispensable; let us accomplish them!" Then touching on the
entry of the councillor, he did not forget "the martial air of our
militia;" nor "our most merry village maidens;" nor the "bald-headed old
men like patriarchs who were there, and of whom some, the remnants of our
phalanxes, still felt their hearts beat at the manly sound of the drums."
He cited himself among the first of the members of the jury, and he even
called attention in a note to the fact that Monsieur Homais, chemist, had
sent a memoir on cider to the agricultural society.</p>
<p>When he came to the distribution of the prizes, he painted the joy of the
prize-winners in dithyrambic strophes. "The father embraced the son, the
brother the brother, the husband his consort. More than one showed his
humble medal with pride; and no doubt when he got home to his good
housewife, he hung it up weeping on the modest walls of his cot.</p>
<p>"About six o'clock a banquet prepared in the meadow of Monsieur Leigeard
brought together the principal personages of the fete. The greatest
cordiality reigned here. Divers toasts were proposed: Monsieur Lieuvain,
the King; Monsieur Tuvache, the Prefect; Monsieur Derozerays, Agriculture;
Monsieur Homais, Industry and the Fine Arts, those twin sisters; Monsieur
Leplichey, Progress. In the evening some brilliant fireworks on a sudden
illumined the air. One would have called it a veritable kaleidoscope, a
real operatic scene; and for a moment our little locality might have
thought itself transported into the midst of a dream of the 'Thousand and
One Nights.' Let us state that no untoward event disturbed this family
meeting." And he added "Only the absence of the clergy was remarked. No
doubt the priests understand progress in another fashion. Just as you
please, messieurs the followers of Loyola!"</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />