They went to Falaise for a jujube, and,
even under the apothecary's own eyes, they submitted his paste to
the test of water. It assumed the appearance of a piece of bacon,
which indicated gelatine.
After this triumph, their pride rose to a high pitch. They
bought up the stock of a bankrupt distiller, and soon there arrived
in the house sieves, barrels, funnels, skimmers, filters, and
scales, without counting a bowl of wood with a ball attached and a
Moreshead still, which required a reflecting-furnace with a basket
funnel. They learned how sugar is clarified, and the different
kinds of boilings, the large and the small system of boiling twice
over, the blowing system,68 the methods of making up in balls, the
reduction of sugar to a viscous state, and the making of burnt
sugar. But they longed to use the still; and they broached the fine
liqueurs, beginning with the aniseed cordial. The liquid nearly
always drew away the materials with it, or rather they stuck
together at the bottom; at other times they were mistaken as to the
amount of the ingredients. Around them shone great copper pans;
egg-shaped vessels projected their narrow openings; saucepans hung
from the walls. Frequently one of them culled herbs on the table,
while the other made the ball swing in the suspended bowl. They
stirred the ladles; they tasted the mashes.
Bouvard, always in a perspiration, had no garment on save his
shirt and his trousers, drawn up to the pit of his stomach by his
short braces; but, giddy as a bird, he would forget the opening in
the centre of the cucurbit, or would make the fire too strong.
Pécuchet kept muttering calculations, motionless in his long
blouse, a kind of child's smock-frock with sleeves; and they looked
upon themselves as very serious people engaged in very useful
occupations.
At length they dreamed of a cream which would surpass all
others. They would put into it coriander as in Kummel, kirsch as in
Maraschino, hyssop as in Chartreuse, amber-seed as in Vespetro
cordial, and sweet calamus as in Krambambuly; and it would be
coloured red with sandalwood. But under what name should they
introduce it for commercial purposes?—for they would want a name
easy to retain and yet fanciful. Having turned the matter over a
long time, they determined that it should be called
"Bouvarine."69
About the end of autumn stains appeared in the three glass bowls
containing the preserves. The tomatoes and green peas were rotten.
That must have been due to the way they had stopped up the vessels.
Then the problem of stoppage tormented them. In order to try the
new methods, they required money; and the farm had eaten up their
resources.
Many times tenants had offered themselves; but Bouvard would not
have them. His principal farm-servant carried on the cultivation
according to his directions, with a risky economy, to such an
extent that the crops diminished and everything was imperilled; and
they were talking about their embarrassments when Maître Gouy
entered the laboratory, escorted by his wife, who remained timidly
in the background.
Thanks to all the dressings they had got, the lands were
improved, and he had come to take up the farm again. He ran it
down. In spite of all their toils, the profits were uncertain; in
short, if he wanted it, that was because of his love for the
country, and his regret for such good masters.
They dismissed him coldly. He came back the same evening.
Pécuchet had preached at Bouvard; they were on the point of
giving way. Gouy asked for a reduction of rent; and when the others
protested, he began to bellow rather than speak, invoking the name
of God, enumerating his labours, and extolling his merits. When
they called on him to state his terms, he hung down his head
instead of answering. Then his wife, seated near the door, with a
big basket on her knees, made similar protestations, screeching in
a sharp voice, like a hen that has been hurt.70
At last the lease was agreed on, the rent being fixed at three
thousand francs a year—a third less than it had been formerly.
Before they had separated, Maître Gouy offered to buy up the
stock, and the bargaining was renewed.
The valuation of the chattels occupied fifteen days. Bouvard was
dying of fatigue. He let everything go for a sum so contemptible
that Gouy at first opened his eyes wide, and exclaiming, "Agreed!"
slapped his palm.
After which the proprietors, following the old custom, proposed
that they should take a "nip" at the house, and Pécuchet opened a
bottle of his Malaga, less through generosity than in the hope of
eliciting eulogies on the wine.
But the husbandman said, with a sour look, "It's like liquorice
syrup." And his wife, "in order to get rid of the taste," asked for
a glass of brandy.
A graver matter engaged their attention. All the ingredients of
the "Bouvarine" were now collected. They heaped them together in
the cucurbit, with the alcohol, lighted the fire, and waited.
However, Pécuchet, annoyed by the misadventure about the Malaga,
took the tin boxes out of the cupboard and pulled the lid off the
first, then off the second, and then off the third. He angrily
flung them down, and called out to Bouvard. The latter had fastened
the cock of the worm in order to try the effect on the
preserves.
The disillusion was complete. The slices of veal were like
boiled boot-soles; a muddy fluid had taken the place of the
lobster; the fish-stew was unrecognisable; mushroom growths had
sprouted over the soup, and an intolerable smell tainted the
laboratory.71
Suddenly, with the noise of a bombshell, the still burst into
twenty pieces, which jumped up to the ceiling, smashing the pots,
flattening out the skimmers and shattering the glasses. The coal
was scattered about, the furnace was demolished, and next day
Germaine found a spatula in the yard.
The force of the steam had broken the instrument to such an
extent that the cucurbit was pinned to the head of the still.
Pécuchet immediately found himself squatted behind the vat, and
Bouvard lay like one who had fallen over a stool. For ten minutes
they remained in this posture, not daring to venture on a single
movement, pale with terror, in the midst of broken glass.
1 comment