Bouvard et Pécuchet is an unfinished satirical work by Gustave Flaubert, published in 1881 after his death in 1880.
Although conceived in 1863 as Les Deux Cloportes ("The Two Woodlice"), and partially inspired by a short story of Barthélemy Maurice (Les Deux Greffiers,
"The Two Court Clerks", which appeared in La Revue des Tribunaux in 1841 and which he may have read in 1858), Flaubert did not begin the work in earnest
until 1872, at a time when financial ruin threatened. Over time, the book obsessed him to the degree that he claimed to have read over 1500 books in preparation for
writing it—he intended it to be his masterpiece, surpassing all of his other works. He only took a minor break, in order to compose Three Tales in 1875–76. It
received lukewarm reviews: critics failed to appreciate both its message and its structural devices.
Bouvard et Pécuchet details the adventures of two Parisian copy-clerks, François Denys Bartholomée Bouvard and Juste Romain Cyrille Pécuchet, of the same age and nearly identical temperament. They meet one hot summer day in 1838 by the canal Saint-Martin and form an instant, symbiotic friendship. When Bouvard inherits a sizable fortune, the two decide to move to the countryside. They find a 94-acre property near the town of Chavignolles in Normandy, between Caen and Falaise, and 100 miles west of Rouen. Their search for intellectual stimulation leads them, over the course of years, to flounder through almost every branch of knowledge.
Flaubert uses their quest to expose the hidden weaknesses of the sciences and arts, as nearly every project Bouvard and Pécuchet set their minds on comes to grief.
Their endeavours are interleaved with the story of their deteriorating relations with the local villagers; and the Revolution of 1848 is the occasion for much
despondent discussion. The manuscript breaks off near the end of the novel. According to one set of Flaubert's notes, the townsfolk, enraged by Bouvard and
Pécuchet's antics, try to force them out of the area, or have them committed. Disgusted with the world in general, Bouvard and Pécuchet ultimately decide to "return
to copying as before" (copier comme autrefois), giving up their intellectual boundering. The work ends with their eager preparations to construct a two-seated desk
on which to write.
This was originally intended to be followed by a large sample of what they copy out: possibly a sottisier (anthology of stupid quotations), the Dictionary of
Received Ideas (encyclopedia of commonplace notions), or a combination of both.
Because Bouvard and Pécuchet rarely persevere with any subject beyond their first disappointments, they are perpetually rank beginners: the lack of real achievement and the constant forward movement
through time (as shown through the rapid political changes from 1848 to 1851) create a strong sense of tension in the work.
Chapter 1. Meeting; friendship; Bouvard's inheritance (1838-41)
Chapter 2. Agriculture; landscape gardening; food preservation (March 1841-autumn 1842)
Chapter 3. Chemistry; anatomy; medicine; biology; geology
Chapter 4. Archeology; architecture; history (a study of the Duc d'Angoulême); mnemonics
Chapter 5. Literature; drama; grammar; aesthetics
Chapter 6. Politics (25 February 1848)
Chapter 7. Love
Chapter 8. Gymnastics; occultism; theology; philosophy; they consider suicide; Christmas
Chapter 9. Religion
Chapter 10. Education (Victor and Victorine); music; urban planning; arguments with everyone around them
Likely ending. Speeches at the Golden Cross Inn; futurism; they narrowly escape prison; the desk for two