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Madame Bovary


Petersburg society and finds more in Count Vronsky, an officer from St. Petersburg. If Karenin or Charles had been anything more than themselves, the heroines may not have been forced to resort to other relationships. For example, if Charles had not fulfilled Emma's every command, she may have thought that he was losing interest. Instead of engaging herself in taboo love affairs with Rodolphe and Léon, she would have focused her attention on keeping Charles interested in the relationship, as Emma would not have been bored with the relationship: .
             "Would this misery last for ever? Would she never escape? She was every bit as good as all the women who lived happy lives! At La Vaubyessard she had seen duchesses with thicker waists and inferior manner, and she cursed God for his injustice; she used to lean her head against the wall and weep; she envied the riotous life, the nights of dancing, the insolent of pleasure and the wildness she had never known, things that were surely to be had."" .
             Emma sought after, more than anything to have a lead a famous life, and it was from the beginning of her marriage it became increasingly obvious to her that Charles would not be able to fulfill her desires. Therefore, the purpose of including Charles and Karenin in the novels is to help characterize Anna and Emma as being incapable of dealing with monotony of an ordinary life.
             Rodolphe and Count Alexey Vronsky are the "lovers- in Anna Karenina and Madame Bovary. The primary purpose for their inclusion in the novel is to highlight show the heroines' jealousy, persistence, and neediness as character flaws. The fundamental first attraction for Emma, concerning Rodolphe is that his qualities parallel the lovers from her novels. However, Emma is essentially interested in Rodolphe's love because he does not love her back. Contrasting her relationship with Charles, she has to work for his attention.


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