Madame Bovary begins when Charles Bovary is a juvenile boy, not capable to fit in at his new school and ridiculed by his new classmates. As a kid, and afterward when he grows into a young man, Charles is ordinary and boring. He fails his initial medical exam and simply just manages to turn out to be a second-rate country doctor. His mother marries him off to a widow who dies soon later, parting Charles much less money than he expected. Charles almost immediately falls in love with Emma, the daughter of a patient, and the two make a decision to marry.
After an intricate wedding, they set up house in Tostes, where Charles has his practice. However marriage doesn't live up to Emma's idealistic outlook. Since she lived in a convent as a juvenile girl, she has dreamed of love and wedding as a solution to all her troubles. Later than she attends an overstated ball at the home of a wealthy nobleman, she begins to dream continuously of a more complicated life. She grows uninterested and dejected when she compares her fantasies to the dull actuality of village life, and finally her lethargy makes her sick. As soon as Emma becomes pregnant, Charles decides to move to a special town in hopes of bracing her health.
In the tale Madame Bovary, it's simple to narrate to the characters in addition to the author of this book. One can see that they both share a comparatively alike view on life, and that their experiences really tie in with each other. Emma Bovary dreamed of a life ahead of that of perfection as well. She realizes that she leads a usual and average life, however simply does not want to put up with it. In the novel, Emma meets a contemptible doctor named Charles Bovary. Right through Hedda Gabler and Madame Bovary death is a general pattern.