:41:00
His suggestions were always
accepted...
:41:03
and if she didn't guess his
wishes...
:41:05
she submitted to them without a
murmur.
:41:16
Why not tell the master?
:41:19
It's just nerves. It would only
worry him.
:41:25
It's like old Guerin's daughter
before I came to you.
:41:29
She was so gloomy that if ever
you saw her...
:41:32
you thought of a funeral shift in a
doorway.
:41:36
They said she had a fog in her
mind...
:41:40
that doctors and priests couldn't
help her.
:41:43
Once she married, it went away.
:41:48
With me, it came on after I
married.
:41:54
Rascals! Always the same! Get
inside!
:41:57
Hurry up! You too!
:42:01
They've no respect!
:42:04
How are you?
:42:06
Not well. I'm suffering.
:42:08
So am I! It's the weather.
:42:10
Still, we're born to suffer, as St.
Paul says.
:42:14
What does M. Bovary think?
:42:16
I don't need earthly remedies.
:42:20
Just you wait, Ribaudet, you
rascal!
:42:23
I'd like to know...
:42:25
That's Ribaudet, the carpenter's
son.
:42:27
He's the ring-leader.
:42:29
How's M. Bovary?
:42:31
He and I must be...
:42:33
the busiest people in the parish.
:42:36
He tends to the body...
:42:39
while I tend to the soul.
:42:41
You relieve suffering.
:42:42
You can say that! This morning...
:42:45
I had to go and see a swollen cow.
:42:48
They said it was cursed.
:42:55
Will you stop that! You should be
ashamed!