Summary of Madame Bovary by By Gustave Flaubert

 “An infinity of passion can be contained in one minute, like a crowd in a small space.”

Gustave Flaubert is the name of the 19th century French novelist. He has occupied a vast area in the field of literature by writing some exclusive and comprehensive creations. He is popularly well-known as a novelist speciallly for writing Salammbo and Sentimental Education. At the same time he is famous for his famous novel Madame Bovary that dug in to all sorts interesting themes in complex ways. The novel was first published in 1856. 

Madame Bovery is an autobiographical novel. The personal feelings and emotion are found in this novel. The title of this novel has been named according to the name of its heroine. It is a heroine dominated novel.

At the very beginning of the novel we come to know that one night, a messenger comes to call Charles to the house of a Monsieur Rouault, who has broken his leg. There, Charles meets Rouault’s daughter, the young and pretty Emma Rouault. She fascinates him with her beauty, elegance and artlessness. Charles, who for weeks has been trying to work up the courage to ask Emma, finally proposes, and Emma accepts.

After the wedding Emma’s relationship with her mother-in-law isn’t off to a good start. Charles feels like a new person after his wedding night. Emma’s initial enthusiasm for Charles wanes rather quickly, as she finds that life with him doesn’t correspond to her romantic childhood dreams of happiness and passion.

“She was the lover in every novel, the heroine in every play, the ‘vague she’ in every volume of poetry.”

Emma is bored with her monotonous life. She wants travel, explore foreign places and instill some romance into her marriage. Once she was invited by the Marquis d’Andervilliers to Vaubyessard. She spends the evening dancing with various partners and pretty much forgets that she came with Charles. Charles, on the other hand, is only too glad finally to return to Tostes.

Emma is terribly bored, longs to return to the world of the ball, and devours novels and women’s magazines. Her feelings for her husband have turned into mild disdain. She despises him for his mediocrity and lack of vision and ambition.

“But she – her life was cold as a garret whose dormer-window looks on the north, and ennui, the silent spider, was weaving its web in the darkness in every corner of her heart.”

A year comes and goes. Emma falls ill; a deep melancholy and despair strike her down. Charles suspects that there’s a physical reason for it, but she refuses any medication. He thinks that maybe a change of location might help. When they leave to the village, Emma is pregnant.

There is an important character whose name is Leon Dupuis. When Charles and Emma visit the village, Emma starts talking to the young Leon Dupuis, who works as a clerk in the village. They get on extremely well, and their conversation flows easily from topic to topic. Both are fascinated with and drawn to all things new, and it almost seems like they have found soul mates in each other.


 

Charles and Emma’s first child named Berthe is born and Emma soon grows tired of her and gives her over to a nursemaid in the village. Leon feels more and more drawn to Emma, who to him seems to be so different from all the other people in the village. One day, Emma receives a visit from the cunning shopkeeper Lherueux, who shows her his goods and assures her that he can get whatever luxury item she desires. Heartbroken by Emma’s apparent indifference, Leon decides to leave the village to finish his studies in Paris. He says,

“Ah, good-day! What! you here?”

One day, a Monsieur Rodolphe Boulanger appears at their house to ask Charles to bleed one of his farmers, who suffers from tingling sensations. When Rodolphe sees Emma, he is struck by her looks. The experienced womanizer decides to seduce her. He gathers that her life with her boring husband must be devoid of passion and excitement, and he starts to execute his plan carefully.

At an agricultural fair, Rodolphe seeks out her company and then leads her into a room in the town hall, from which they watch the ceremony. After the encounter, he stays away for weeks. As expected, his absence kindles Emma’s passion. When he finally arrives again at her house, he plays the desperate, unrequited love. He tells her that he believes fate has brought them together.

Emma still resists Rodolphe’s advances but is secretly desperate to have some time along alone with him. The opportunity comes when the naive Charles gives his consent to Emma going horseback riding with Rodolphe. She finally has a lover like all the heroines in her romantic novels. Over the next days and months, Rodolphe and Emma meet regularly, and Emma, recklessly, even starts visiting Rodolphe in his house early in the mornings.

Emma becomes obsessed with Rodolphe. To please and excite him, she dresses in the latest fashion and jewelry from Lherueux. According to Emma’s wish, he agrees to her plan to run away together. At their last meeting before their agreed departure, Rodolphe promises Emma that he will be at the coach, but in reality, he already knows that he won’t go through with the plan. He spills a drop of water on the paper so Emma will think he cried when he wrote it – and sends it to her.

When Emma receives the letter, she breaks down. For the first time in her life, she considers suicide, and a long illness follows. Charles is worried sick about her – and for more than a month doesn’t leave her side.

“She wished at the same time to die and to live in Paris.”

Faced with severe money troubles, Charles takes out a loan with Lheureux with extortionate repayment conditions. Emma starts to improve slowly and begins to turn back to her religious upbringing. When Emma is finally well enough, Homais suggests that Charles take her to Rouen for a day to visit the opera, and Charles agrees – anything to cheer up Emma.

Leon follows Emma and Charles to their hotel, planning to seek her out in the morning. Emma pretends reluctance but eventually agrees to a meeting in the cathedral the next day. Leon persuades her to join him in a carriage, and they set off on a tour around the city – with the curtains drawn. Whenever the driver tries to stop, the only thing he hears is Léon’s command to “keep moving!”

Lherueux starts to hassle her to pay back the money she and Charles have borrowed. When she tells him that she doesn’t have the money at the moment, he suggests that she sell a property that used to belong to Charles’s father. With her power of attorney, she agrees to the sale, but instead of taking her money to pay off the bills, Lherueux proposes that she might want to keep hold of it and pay back the money in six months’ time. Emma agrees and continues to live beyond her means, spending money and visiting Leon regularly. But their feelings for each other begin to grow stale.

“Never touch your idols: the gilding will stick to your fingers.”

The next day, the bailiff and two witnesses come to Emma and Charles’s house to value their possessions. Emma tries to convince Leon to get a loan of 3,000 francs for her. He is unsuccessful.

At the end of her tether, Emma goes to the apothecary’s house and begs the young clerk Justin, who is secretly in love with her, to let her in. She claims she requires rat poison and, unable to deny her anything, he lets her in without telling Homais. She opens the cupboard, grabs a bottle of arsenic and drinks it. She returns home, writes a letter to Charles – who by now knows that the house is up for auction. The poison works slowly, and Emma is in agony for hours. All of Charles’s attempts to rescue her fail, and after a grueling struggle, she dies.

“To please her, as though she were still alive, he adopted her predilections, her ideas… He put cosmetics on his  moustache , and, like her, signed notes of hand. She corrupted him from beyond the grave.

Charles is inconsolable. He stops working and keeps Emma’s bedroom almost as a shrine. The very same day, Berthe finds him sitting on the bench in the garden – dead.

Eventually, we can comment that Gustave Flaubert’s Madame Bovary is a tragic novel as we have seen the tragic death of our beloved heroine.
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