A curious circumstance was that
La Butte, with the stones cleared away from it at last, yielded
less than before.
He deemed it advisable to renew his material. He bought a
Guillaume scarifier, a Valcourt weeder, an English drill-machine,
and the great swing-plough of Mathieu de Dombasle, but the
ploughboy disparaged it.
"Do you learn to use it!"
"Well, do you show me!"
He made an attempt to show, but blundered, and the peasants
sneered. He could never make them obey the command of the bell. He
was incessantly bawling after them, rushing from one place to
another, taking down observations in a note-book, making
appointments and forgetting all about them—and his head was boiling
over with industrial speculations.
He got the notion into his head of cultivating the poppy for the
purpose of getting opium from it, and above all the milk-vetch,
which he intended to sell under the name of "family coffee."
Finally, in order to fatten his oxen the more quickly, he
blooded them for an entire fortnight.
He killed none of his pigs, and gorged them with salted oats.
The pigsty soon became too narrow.44 The animals obstructed the farmyard, broke
down the fences, and went gnawing at everything.
In the hot weather twenty-five sheep began to get spoiled, and
shortly afterwards died. The same week three bulls perished owing
to Bouvard's blood-lettings.
In order to destroy the maggots, he thought of shutting up the
fowls in a hencoop on rollers, which two men had to push along
behind the plough—a thing which had only the effect of breaking the
claws of the fowls.
He manufactured beer with germander-leaves, and gave it to the
harvesters as cider. The children cried, the women moaned, and the
men raged. They all threatened to go, and Bouvard gave way to
them.
However, to convince them of the harmlessness of his beverage,
he swallowed several bottles of it in their presence; then he got
cramps, but concealed his pains under a playful exterior. He even
got the mixture sent to his own residence. He drank some of it with
Pécuchet in the evening, and both of them tried to persuade
themselves that it was good. Besides, it was necessary not to let
it go to waste. Bouvard's colic having got worse, Germaine went for
the doctor.
He was a grave-looking man, with a round forehead, and he began
by frightening his patient. He thought the gentleman's attack of
cholerine must be connected with the beer which people were talking
about in the country. He desired to know what it was composed of,
and found fault with it in scientific terms with shruggings of the
shoulders. Pécuchet, who had supplied the recipe for it, was
mortified.45
In spite of pernicious limings, stinted redressings, and
unseasonable weedings, Bouvard had in front of him, in the
following year, a splendid crop of wheat. He thought of drying it
by fermentation, in the Dutch fashion, on the Clap-Meyer system:
that is to say, he got it thrown down all of a heap and piled up in
stacks, which would be overturned as soon as the damp escaped from
them, and then exposed to the open air—after which Bouvard went off
without the least uneasiness.
Next day, while they were at dinner, they heard under the beech
trees the beating of a drum. Germaine ran out to know what was the
matter, but the man was by this time some distance away. Almost at
the same moment the church-bell rang violently.
Bouvard and Pécuchet felt alarmed, and, impatient to learn what
had happened, they rushed bareheaded along the Chavignolles
road.
An old woman passed them. She knew nothing about it. They
stopped a little boy, who replied:
"I believe it's a fire!"
And the drum continued beating and the bell ringing more loudly
than before. At length they reached the nearest houses in the
village. The grocer, some yards away, exclaimed:
"The fire is at your place!"
Pécuchet stepped out in double-quick time; and he said to
Bouvard, who trotted by his side with equal speed:
"One, two! one, two!"—counting his steps regularly, like the
chasseurs of Vincennes.
The road which they took was a continuously uphill one; the
sloping ground hid the horizon from46 their view. They reached a height close to
La Butte, and at a single glance the disaster was revealed to
them.
All the stacks, here and there, were flaming like volcanoes in
the midst of the plain, stripped bare in the evening stillness.
Around the biggest of them there were about three hundred persons,
perhaps; and under the command of M. Foureau, the mayor, in a
tricoloured scarf, youngsters, with poles and crooks, were dragging
down the straw from the top in order to save the rest of it.
Bouvard, in his eagerness, was near knocking down Madame Bordin,
who happened to be there. Then, seeing one of his servant-boys, he
loaded him with insults for not having given him warning. The
servant-boy, on the contrary, through excess of zeal, had at first
rushed to the house, then to the church, next to where Monsieur
himself was staying, and had returned by the other road.
Bouvard lost his head. His entire household gathered round him,
all talking together, and he forbade them to knock down the stacks,
begged of them to give him some help, called for water, and asked
where were the firemen.
"We've got to get them first!" exclaimed the mayor.
"That's your fault!" replied Bouvard.
He flew into a passion, and made use of improper language, and
everyone wondered at the patience of M. Foureau, who, all the same,
was a surly individual, as might be seen from his big lips and
bulldog jaw.
The heat of the stacks became so great that nobody could come
close to them any longer. Under47 the devouring flames the straw writhed with
a crackling sound, and the grains of corn lashed one's face as if
they were buckshot. Then the stack fell in a huge burning pile to
the ground, and a shower of sparks flew out of it, while fiery
waves floated above the red mass, which presented in its
alternations of colour parts rosy as vermilion and others like
clotted blood. The night had come, the wind was swelling; from time
to time, a flake of fire passed across the black sky.
Bouvard viewed the conflagration with tears in his eyes, which
were veiled by his moist lids, and his whole face was swollen with
grief.
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