Bare-armed, side by side,
they dug, weeded, and pruned, imposing tasks on each other, and
eating their meals as quickly as ever they could, taking care,
however, to drink their coffee on the hillock, in order to enjoy
the view.
If they happened to come across a snail, they pounced on it and
crushed it, making grimaces with the corners of their mouths, as if
they were cracking nuts. They never went out without their grafting
implements, and they used to cut the worms in two with such force
that the iron of the implement would sink three inches deep. To get
rid of caterpillars, they struck the trees furiously with
switches.
Bouvard planted a peony in the middle of the grass plot, and
tomatoes so that they would hang down like chandeliers under the
arch of the arbour.
Pécuchet had a large pit dug in front of the kitchen, and
divided it into three parts, where he30 could manufacture composts which would grow
a heap of things, whose detritus would again bring other crops,
providing in this way other manures to a limitless extent; and he
fell into reveries on the edge of the pit, seeing in the future
mountains of fruits, floods of flowers, and avalanches of
vegetables. But the horse-dung, so necessary for the beds, was not
to be had, inasmuch as the farmers did not sell it, and the
innkeepers refused to supply it. At last, after many searches, in
spite of the entreaties of Bouvard, and flinging aside all
shamefacedness, he made up his mind to go for the dung himself.
It was in the midst of this occupation that Madame Bordin
accosted him one day on the high-road. When she had complimented
him, she inquired about his friend. This woman's black eyes, very
small and very brilliant, her high complexion, and her assurance
(she even had a little moustache) intimidated Pécuchet. He replied
curtly, and turned his back on her—an impoliteness of which Bouvard
disapproved.
Then the bad weather came on, with frost and snow. They
installed themselves in the kitchen, and went in for trellis-work,
or else kept going from one room to another, chatted by the chimney
corner, or watched the rain coming down.
Since the middle of Lent they had awaited the approach of
spring, and each morning repeated: "Everything is starting out!"
But the season was late, and they consoled their impatience by
saying: "Everything is going to start out!"
At length they were able to gather the green peas. The asparagus
gave a good crop; and the vine was promising.31
Since they were able to work together at gardening, they must
needs succeed at agriculture; and they were seized with an ambition
to cultivate the farm. With common sense and study of the subject,
they would get through it beyond a doubt.
But they should first see how others carried on operations, and
so they drew up a letter in which they begged of M. de Faverges to
do them the honour of allowing them to visit the lands which he
cultivated.
The count made an appointment immediately to meet them.
After an hour's walking, they reached the side of a hill
overlooking the valley of the Orne. The river wound its way to the
bottom of the valley. Blocks of red sandstone stood here and there,
and in the distance larger masses of stone formed, as it were, a
cliff overhanging fields of ripe corn. On the opposite hill the
verdure was so abundant that it hid the house from view. Trees
divided it into unequal squares, outlining themselves amid the
grass by more sombre lines.
Suddenly the entire estate came into view. The tiled roofs
showed where the farm stood. To the right rose the château with its
white façade, and beyond it was a wood. A lawn descended to the
river, into which a row of plane trees cast their shadows.
The two friends entered a field of lucern, which people were
spreading. Women wearing straw hats, with cotton handkerchiefs
round their heads, and paper shades, were lifting with rakes the
hay which lay on the ground, while at the end of the plain, near
the stacks, bundles were being rapidly flung into a long cart,
yoked to three horses.32
The count advanced, followed by his manager. He was dressed in
dimity; and his stiff figure and mutton-chop whiskers gave him at
the same time the air of a magistrate and a dandy. Even when he was
speaking, his features did not appear to move.
As soon as they had exchanged some opening courtesies, he
explained his system with regard to fodder: the swathes should be
turned without scattering them; the ricks should be conical, and
the bundles made immediately on the spot, and then piled together
by tens. As for the English rake, the meadow was too uneven for
such an implement.
A little girl, with her stockingless feet in old shoes, and
showing her skin through the rents in her dress, was supplying the
women with cider, which she poured out of a jug supported against
her hip. The count asked where this child came from, but nobody
could tell. The women who were making the hay had picked her up to
wait on them during the harvesting. He shrugged his shoulders, and
just as he was moving away from the spot, he gave vent to some
complaints as to the immorality of our country districts.
Bouvard eulogised his lucern field.
It was fairly good, in spite of the ravages of the
cuscute.[2]
The future agriculturists opened their eyes wide at the word
"cuscute."
On account of the number of his cattle, he resorted to
artificial meadowing; besides, it went well before the other
crops—a thing that did not always happen in the case of
fodder.33
"This at least appears to me incontestable."
"Oh! incontestable," replied Bouvard and Pécuchet in one breath.
They were on the borders of a field which had been carefully
thinned. A horse, which was being led by hand, was dragging along a
large box, mounted on three wheels. Seven ploughshares below were
opening in parallel lines small furrows, in which the grain fell
through pipes descending to the ground.
"Here," said the count, "I sow turnips. The turnip is the basis
of my quadrennial system of cultivation."
And he was proceeding to deliver a lecture on the drill-plough
when a servant came to look for him, and told him that he was
wanted at the château.
His manager took his place—a man with a forbidding countenance
and obsequious manners.
He conducted "these gentlemen" to another field, where fourteen
harvesters, with bare breasts and legs apart, were cutting down
rye. The steels whistled in the chaff, which came pouring straight
down.
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