Madame Bovary - Page 49/262

The winter was severe. The windows every morning were covered with

rime, and the light shining through them, dim as through ground-glass,

sometimes did not change the whole day long. At four o'clock the lamp

had to be lighted.

On fine days she went down into the garden. The dew had left on the

cabbages a silver lace with long transparent threads spreading from one

to the other. No birds were to be heard; everything seemed asleep, the

espalier covered with straw, and the vine, like a great sick serpent

under the coping of the wall, along which, on drawing hear, one saw the

many-footed woodlice crawling. Under the spruce by the hedgerow, the

curie in the three-cornered hat reading his breviary had lost his right

foot, and the very plaster, scaling off with the frost, had left white

scabs on his face.

Then she went up again, shut her door, put on coals, and fainting with

the heat of the hearth, felt her boredom weigh more heavily than ever.

She would have liked to go down and talk to the servant, but a sense of

shame restrained her.

Every day at the same time the schoolmaster in a black skullcap opened

the shutters of his house, and the rural policeman, wearing his sabre

over his blouse, passed by. Night and morning the post-horses, three by

three, crossed the street to water at the pond. From time to time the

bell of a public house door rang, and when it was windy one could hear

the little brass basins that served as signs for the hairdresser's shop

creaking on their two rods. This shop had as decoration an old engraving

of a fashion-plate stuck against a windowpane and the wax bust of a

woman with yellow hair. He, too, the hairdresser, lamented his wasted

calling, his hopeless future, and dreaming of some shop in a big

town--at Rouen, for example, overlooking the harbour, near the

theatre--he walked up and down all day from the mairie to the church,

sombre and waiting for customers. When Madame Bovary looked up, she

always saw him there, like a sentinel on duty, with his skullcap over

his ears and his vest of lasting.

Sometimes in the afternoon outside the window of her room, the head of a

man appeared, a swarthy head with black whiskers, smiling slowly, with

a broad, gentle smile that showed his white teeth. A waltz immediately

began and on the organ, in a little drawing room, dancers the size of

a finger, women in pink turbans, Tyrolians in jackets, monkeys in frock

coats, gentlemen in knee-breeches, turned and turned between the sofas,

the consoles, multiplied in the bits of looking glass held together

at their corners by a piece of gold paper. The man turned his handle,

looking to the right and left, and up at the windows. Now and again,

while he shot out a long squirt of brown saliva against the milestone,

with his knee raised his instrument, whose hard straps tired his

shoulder; and now, doleful and drawling, or gay and hurried, the music

escaped from the box, droning through a curtain of pink taffeta under

a brass claw in arabesque. They were airs played in other places at

the theatres, sung in drawing rooms, danced to at night under lighted

lustres, echoes of the world that reached even to Emma. Endless

sarabands ran through her head, and, like an Indian dancing girl on the

flowers of a carpet, her thoughts leapt with the notes, swung from dream

to dream, from sadness to sadness. When the man had caught some coppers

in his cap, he drew down an old cover of blue cloth, hitched his organ

on to his back, and went off with a heavy tread. She watched him going.