Madame Bovary - Page 175/262

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 intervals made little movements inside the satin

of them with her toes.

At last she sighed.

"But the most wretched thing, is it not--is to drag out, as I do, a

useless existence. If our pains were only of some use to someone, we

should find consolation in the thought of the sacrifice."

He started off in praise of virtue, duty, and silent immolation, having

himself an incredible longing for self-sacrifice that he could not

satisfy.

"I should much like," she said, "to be a nurse at a hospital."

"Alas! men have none of these holy missions, and I see nowhere any

calling--unless perhaps that of a doctor."

With a slight shrug of her shoulders, Emma interrupted him to speak of

her illness, which had almost killed her. What a pity! She should not be

suffering now! Leon at once envied the calm of the tomb, and one evening

he had even made his will, asking to be buried in that beautiful rug

with velvet stripes he had received from her. For this was how they

would have wished to be, each setting up an ideal to which they were now

adapting their past life. Besides, speech is a rolling-mill that always

thins out the sentiment.

But at this invention of the rug she asked, "But why?"

"Why?" He hesitated. "Because I loved you so!" And congratulating

himself at having surmounted the difficulty, Leon watched her face out

of the corner of his eyes.

It was like the sky when a gust of wind drives the clouds across. The

mass of sad thoughts that darkened them seemed to be lifted from her

blue eyes; her whole face shone. He waited. At last she replied-"I always suspected it."

Then they went over all the trifling events of that far-off existence,

whose joys and sorrows they had just summed up in one word. They

recalled the arbour with clematis, the dresses she had worn, the

furniture of her room, the whole of her house.