Read Bouvard and Pecuchet Page 24


  They found it hard to move about amongst the various articles, and Bouvard, by not taking precautions, often knocked against the statue. With its big eyes, its drooping lip, and its air of a drunkard, it also annoyed Pécuchet. For a long time he had wished to get rid of it, but through carelessness put it off from day to day.

  One evening, in the middle of a dispute on the monad, Bouvard hit his big toe against St. Peter's thumb, and turning on him in a rage, exclaimed:

  "He plagues me, this jackanapes! Let us toss him out!"

  It was difficult to do this over the staircase. They flung open the window, and gently tried to tip St. Peter over the edge. Pécuchet, on his knees, attempted to raise his heels, while Bouvard pressed against his shoulders. The old codger in stone did not budge. After this they had recourse to the halberd as a lever, and finally succeeded in stretching him out quite straight. Then, after a see-saw motion, he dashed into the open space, his tiara going before him. A heavy crash reached their ears, and next day they found him broken into a dozen pieces in the old pit for composts.

  An hour afterwards the notary came in, bringing good news to them. A lady in the neighbourhood was willing to advance a thousand crown-pieces on the security of a mortgage of their farm, and, as they were expressing their satisfaction at the proposal:

  "Pardon me. She adds, as a condition, that you should sell her the Ecalles meadow for fifteen285 hundred francs. The loan will be advanced this very day. The money is in my office."

  They were both disposed to give way.

  Bouvard ended by saying: "Good God! be it so, then."

  "Agreed," said Marescot. And then he mentioned the lender's name: it was Madame Bordin.

  "I suspected 'twas she!" exclaimed Pécuchet.

  Bouvard, who felt humiliated, had not a word to say.

  She or some one else—what did it matter? The principal thing was to get out of their difficulties.

  When they received the money (they were to get the sum for the Ecalles later) they immediately paid all their bills; and they were returning to their abode when, at the corner of the market-place, they were stopped by Farmer Gouy.

  He had been on his way to their house to apprise them of a misfortune. The wind, the night before, had blown down twenty apple trees into the farmyard, overturned the boilery, and carried away the roof of the barn.

  They spent the remainder of the afternoon in estimating the amount of the damage, and they continued the inquiry on the following day with the assistance of the carpenter, the mason, and the slater. The repairs would cost at least about eighteen hundred francs.

  Then, in the evening, Gouy presented himself. Marianne herself had, a short time before, told him all about the sale of the Ecalles meadow—a piece of land with a splendid yield, suitable in every way, and scarcely requiring any cultivation at all, the best bit in the whole farm!—and he asked for a reduction.286

  The two gentlemen refused it. The matter was submitted to the justice of the peace, who decided in favour of the farmer. The loss of the Ecalles, which was valued at two thousand francs per acre, caused him an annual depreciation of seventy, and he was sure to win in the courts.

  Their fortune was diminished. What were they to do? And soon the question would be, How were they to live?

  They both sat down to table full of discouragement. Marcel knew nothing about it in the kitchen. His dinner this time was better than theirs.

  The soup was like dish-water, the rabbit had a bad smell, the kidney-beans were underdone, the plates were dirty, and at dessert Bouvard burst into a passion and threatened to break everything on Marcel's head.

  "Let us be philosophers," said Pécuchet. "A little less money, the intrigues of a woman, the clumsiness of a servant—what is it but this? You are too much immersed in matter."

  "But when it annoys me?" said Bouvard.

  "For my part, I don't admit it," rejoined Pécuchet.

  He had recently been reading an analysis of Berkeley, and added:

  "I deny extension, time, space, even substance! for the true substance is the mind-perceiving qualities."

  "Quite so," said Bouvard; "but get rid of the world, and you'll have no proof left of God's existence."

  Pécuchet uttered a cry, and a long one too, although he had a cold in his head, caused by the iodine of potassium, and a continual feverishness287 increased his excitement. Bouvard, being uneasy about him, sent for the doctor.

  Vaucorbeil ordered orange-syrup with the iodine, and for a later stage cinnabar baths.

  "What's the use?" replied Pécuchet. "One day or another the form will die out. The essence does not perish."

  "No doubt," said the physician, "matter is indestructible. However——"

  "Ah, no!—ah, no! The indestructible thing is being. This body which is there before me—yours, doctor—prevents me from knowing your real self, and is, so to speak, only a garment, or rather a mask."

  Vaucorbeil believed he was mad.

  "Good evening. Take care of your mask."

  Pécuchet did not stop. He procured an introduction to the Hegelian philosophy, and wished to explain it to Bouvard.

  "All that is rational is real. There is not even any reality save the idea. The laws of the mind are laws of the universe; the reason of man is identical with that of God."

  Bouvard pretended to understand.

  "Therefore the absolute is, at the same time, the subject and the object, the unity whereby all differences come to be settled. Thus, things that are contradictory are reconciled. The shadow permits the light; heat and cold intermingled produce temperature. Organism maintains itself only by the destruction of organism; everywhere there is a principle that disunites, a principle that connects."

  They were on the hillock, and the curé was walking past the gateway with his breviary in his hand.288

  Pécuchet asked him to come in, as he desired to finish the explanation of Hegel, and to get some notion of what the curé would say about it.

  The man of the cassock sat down beside them, and Pécuchet broached the question of Christianity.

  "No religion has established this truth so well: 'Nature is but a moment of the idea.'"

  "A moment of the idea!" murmured the priest in astonishment.

  "Why, yes. God in taking a visible envelope showed his consubstantial union with it."

  "With nature—oh! oh!"

  "By His decease He bore testimony to the essence of death; therefore, death was in Him, made and makes part of God."

  The ecclesiastic frowned.

  "No blasphemies! it was for the salvation of the human race that He endured sufferings."

  "Error! We look at death in the case of the individual, where, no doubt, it is a calamity; but with relation to things it is different. Do not separate mind from matter."

  "However, sir, before the Creation——"

  "There was no Creation. It has always existed. Otherwise this would be a new being adding itself to the Divine idea, which is absurd."

  The priest arose; business matters called him elsewhere.

  "I flatter myself I've floored him!" said Pécuchet. "One word more. Since the existence of the world is but a continual passage from life to death, and from death to life, so far from everything existing, nothing is. But everything is becoming—do you understand?"289

  "Yes; I do understand—or rather I don't."

  Idealism in the end exasperated Bouvard.

  "I don't want any more of it. The famous cogito stupefies me. Ideas of things are taken for the things themselves. What we understand very slightly is explained by means of words which we don't understand at all—substance, extension, force, matter, and soul. So much abstraction, imagination. As for God, it is impossible to know in what way He is, if He is at all. Formerly, He used to cause the wind, the thunderstorms, revolutions. At present, He is diminishing. Besides, I don't see the utility of Him."

  "And morality—in this state of affairs."

  "Ah! so much the worse."

/>   "It lacks a foundation in fact," said Pécuchet.

  And he remained silent, driven into a corner by premises which he had himself laid down. It was a surprise—a crushing bit of logic.

  Bouvard no longer even believed in matter.

  The certainty that nothing exists (deplorable though it may be) is none the less a certainty. Few persons are capable of possessing it. This transcendency on their part inspired them with pride, and they would have liked to make a display of it. An opportunity presented itself.

  One morning, while they were going to buy tobacco, they saw a crowd in front of Langlois' door. The public conveyance from Falaise was surrounded, and there was much excitement about a convict named Touache, who was wandering about the country. The conductor had met him at Croix-Verte between two gendarmes, and the people of Chavignolles breathed a sigh of relief.290

  Girbal and the captain remained on the green; then the justice of the peace made his appearance, curious to obtain information, and after him came M. Marescot in a velvet cap and sheepskin slippers.

  Langlois invited them to honour his shop with their presence; they would be more at their ease; and in spite of the customers and the loud ringing of the bell, the gentlemen continued their discussion as to Touache's offences.

  "Goodness gracious!" said Bouvard, "he had bad instincts. That was the whole of it!"

  "They are conquered by virtue," replied the notary.

  "But if a person has not virtue?"

  And Bouvard positively denied free-will.

  "Yet," said the captain, "I can do what I like. I am free, for instance, to move my leg."

  "No, sir, for you have a motive for moving it."

  The captain looked out for something to say in reply, and found nothing. But Girbal discharged this shaft:

  "A Republican speaking against liberty. That is funny."

  "A droll story," chimed in Langlois.

  Bouvard turned on him with this question:

  "Why don't you give all you possess to the poor?"

  The grocer cast an uneasy glance over his entire shop.

  "Look here, now, I'm not such an idiot! I keep it for myself."

  "If you were St. Vincent de Paul, you would act differently, since you would have his character. You obey your own. Therefore, you are not free."291

  "That's a quibble!" replied the company in chorus.

  Bouvard did not flinch, and said, pointing towards the scales on the counter:

  "It will remain motionless so long as each scale is empty. So with the will; and the oscillation of the scales between two weights which seem equal represents the strain on our mind when it is hesitating between different motives, till the moment when the more powerful motive gets the better of it and leads it to a determination."

  "All that," said Girbal, "makes no difference for Touache, and does not prevent him from being a downright vicious rogue."

  Pécuchet addressed the company:

  "Vices are properties of Nature, like floods, tempests."

  The notary stopped, and raising himself on tiptoe at every word:

  "I consider your system one of complete immorality. It gives scope to every kind of excess, excuses crimes, and declares the guilty innocent."

  "Exactly," replied Bouvard; "the wretch who follows his appetites is right from his own point of view just as much as the honest man who listens to reason."

  "Do not defend monsters!"

  "Wherefore monsters? When a person is born blind, an idiot, a homicide, this appears to us to be opposed to order, as if order were known to us, as if Nature were striving towards an end."

  "You then raise a question about Providence?"

  "I do raise a question about it."

  "Look rather to history," exclaimed Pécuchet. "Recall to mind the assassinations of kings, the292 massacres amongst peoples, the dissensions in families, the affliction of individuals."

  "And at the same time," added Bouvard, for they mutually excited each other, "this Providence takes care of little birds, and makes the claws of crayfishes grow again. Oh! if by Providence you mean a law which rules everything, I am of the same opinion, and even more so."

  "However, sir," said the notary, "there are principles."

  "What stuff is that you're talking? A science, according to Condillac, is so much the better the less need it has of them. They do nothing but summarise acquired knowledge, and they bring us back to those conceptions which are exactly the disputable ones."

  "Have you, like us," went on Pécuchet, "scrutinised and explored the arcana of metaphysics?"

  "It is true, gentlemen—it is true!"

  Then the company broke up.

  But Coulon, drawing them aside, told them in a paternal tone that he was no devotee certainly, and that he even hated the Jesuits. However, he did not go as far as they did. Oh, no! certainly not. And at the corner of the green they passed in front of the captain, who, as he lighted his pipe, growled:

  "All the same, I do what I like, by God!"

  Bouvard and Pécuchet gave utterance on other occasions to their scandalous paradoxes. They threw doubt on the honesty of men, the chastity of women, the intelligence of government, the good sense of the people—in short, they sapped the foundations of everything.293

  Foureau was provoked by their behaviour, and threatened them with imprisonment if they went on with such discourses.

  The evidence of their own superiority caused them pain. As they maintained immoral propositions, they must needs be immoral: calumnies were invented about them. Then a pitiable faculty developed itself in their minds, that of observing stupidity and no longer tolerating it. Trifling things made them feel sad: the advertisements in the newspapers, the profile of a shopkeeper, an idiotic remark overheard by chance. Thinking over what was said in their own village, and on the fact that there were even as far as the Antipodes other Coulons, other Marescots, other Foureaus, they felt, as it were, the heaviness of all the earth weighing down upon them.

  They no longer went out of doors, and received no visitors.

  One afternoon a dialogue arose, outside the front entrance, between Marcel and a gentleman who wore dark spectacles and a hat with a large brim. It was the academician Larsoneur. He observed a curtain half-opening and doors being shut. This step on his part was an attempt at reconciliation; and he went away in a rage, directing the man-servant to tell his masters that he regarded them as a pair of common fellows.

  Bouvard and Pécuchet did not care about this. The world was diminishing in importance, and they saw it as if through a cloud that had descended from their brains over their eyes.

  Is it not, moreover, an illusion, a bad dream? Perhaps, on the whole, prosperity and misfortune are294 equally balanced. But the welfare of the species does not console the individual.

  "And what do others matter to me?" said Pécuchet.

  His despair afflicted Bouvard. It was he who had brought his friend to this pass, and the ruinous condition of their house kept their grief fresh by daily irritations.

  In order to revive their spirits they tried discussions, and prescribed tasks for themselves, but speedily fell back into greater sluggishness, into more profound discouragement.

  At the end of each meal they would remain with their elbows on the table groaning with a lugubrious air.

  Marcel would give them a scared look, and then go back to his kitchen, where he stuffed himself in solitude.

  About the middle of midsummer they received a circular announcing the marriage of Dumouchel with Madame Olympe-Zulma Poulet, a widow.

  "God bless him!"

  And they recalled the time when they were happy.

  Why were they no longer following the harvesters? Where were the days when they went through the different farm-houses looking everywhere for antiquities? Nothing now gave them such hours of delight as those which were occupied with the distillery and with literature. A gulf lay between them and that time. It was irrevocable.

  They thought of taking
a walk as of yore through the fields, wandered too far, and got lost. The sky was dotted with little fleecy clouds, the wind was shaking the tiny bells of the oats; a stream was295 purling along through a meadow—and then, all at once, an infectious odour made them halt, and they saw on the pebbles between the thorn trees the putrid carcass of a dog.

  The four limbs were dried up. The grinning jaws disclosed teeth of ivory under the bluish lips; in place of the stomach there was a mass of earth-coloured flesh which seemed to be palpitating with the vermin that swarmed all over it. It writhed, with the sun's rays falling on it, under the gnawing of so many mouths, in this intolerable stench—a stench which was fierce and, as it were, devouring.

  Yet wrinkles gathered on Bouvard's forehead, and his eyes filled with tears.

  Pécuchet said in a stoical fashion, "One day we shall be like that."

  The idea of death had taken hold of them. They talked about it on their way back.

  After all, it has no existence. We pass away into the dew, into the breeze, into the stars. We become part of the sap of trees, the brilliance of precious stones, the plumage of birds. We give back to Nature what she lent to each of us, and the nothingness before us is not a bit more frightful than the nothingness behind us.

  They tried to picture it to themselves under the form of an intense night, a bottomless pit, a continual swoon. Anything would be better than such an existence—monotonous, absurd, and hopeless.

  They enumerated their unsatisfied wants. Bouvard had always wished for horses, equipages, a big supply of Burgundy, and lovely women ready to accommodate him in a splendid habitation. Pécuchet's ambition was philosophical knowledge. Now, the296 vastest of problems, that which contains all others, can be solved in one minute. When would it come, then? "As well to make an end of it at once."

  "Just as you like," said Bouvard.

  And they investigated the question of suicide.

  Where is the evil of casting aside a burden which is crushing you? and of doing an act harmful to nobody? If it offended God, should we have this power? It is not cowardice, though people say so, and to scoff at human pride is a fine thing, even at the price of injury to oneself—the thing that men regard most highly.