Madame Bovary
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: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!

:43:02
As I was saying, farmers have a
hard life.

:43:06
Others do too!
:43:08
Oh, indeed! Workers in the towns,
for example.

:43:12
But women...
:43:13
Ah, that's true!
:43:15
I've known of mothers...
:43:17
honest women, I assure you...
:43:20
real saints...
:43:23
who didn't even have bread.
:43:26
But what of those, Father...
:43:29
who have bread but no...
:43:31
No fire in winter?
:43:34
What does it matter?
:43:35
What do you mean?
:43:36
When one has warmth and food,
things...

:43:40
Oh, my God!
:43:43
What's wrong? Digestive trouble.
:43:46
Go home, Mme Bovary, and have a
nice cup of tea.

:43:49
No, no, it's...
:43:50
I thought you were having a dizzy
spell.

:43:53
You asked me something. What
was it?

:43:55
I can't remember now...

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