[Over Strand and Field by Gustave Flaubert]@TWC D-Link book
Over Strand and Field

CHAPTER VI
5/13

It is wide and deep and represents to perfection the real Catholic holy-water basin, made to receive the entire body of an infant, and not in the least like those narrow shells in our churches in which you can only dip your fingers.
With its clear water rendered more limpid by the contrast of a greenish bed, the vegetation which has grown all around it during the religious calm of centuries, its crumbling angles, and its great mass of bronzed stone, it looks like one of those hollowed rocks which contain salt water.
After we had inspected the chapel carefully, we walked to the river, crossed it in a boat, and plunged into the country.
It is absolutely deserted and strangely empty.

Trees, bushes, sea-rushes, tamarisks, and heather grow on the edge of the ditches.

We came to broad stretches of land, but we did not see a soul anywhere.

The sky was bleak and a fine rain moistened the atmosphere and spread a grey veil over the country.

The paths we chose were hollow and shaded by clusters of foliage, the branches of which, uniting, drooped over our heads and almost prevented us from walking erect.


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