QuoteAuthors | Popular Quotes from Famous Authors

Gustave Flaubert Quotes

A friend who dies, it’s something of you who dies.

A memory is a beautiful thing, it’s almost a desire that you miss.

A superhuman will is needed in order to write, and I am only a man.

All one’s inventions are true, you can be sure of that. Poetry is as exact a science as geometry.

Anything becomes interesting if you look at it long enough.

Art requires neither complaisance nor politeness; nothing but faith, faith and freedom.

Artists who seek perfection in everything are those who cannot attain it in anything.

As a rule we disbelieve all the facts and theories for which we have no use.

Be regular and orderly in your life, so that you may be violent and original in your work.

But the disparaging of those we love always alienates us from them to some extent. We must not touch our idols; the gilt comes off in our hands.

Caught up in life, you see it badly. You suffer from it or enjoy it too much. The artist, in my opinion, is a monstrosity, something outside of nature.

Do not read, as children do, to amuse yourself, or like the ambitious, for the purpose of instruction. No, read in order to live.

Everything one invents is true, you may be perfectly sure of that. Poetry is as precise as geometry.

Exuberance is better than taste.

Happiness is a monstrosity! Punished are those who seek it.

Here is true immorality: ignorance and stupidity; the devil is nothing but this. His name is Legion.

Human speech is like a cracked kettle on which we tap crude rhythms for bears to dance to, while we long to make music that will melt the stars.

I am a man-pen. I feel through the pen, because of the pen.

I believe that if one always looked at the skies, one would end up with wings.

I hate that which we have decided to call realism, even though I have been made one of its high priests.

I have come to have the firm conviction that vanity is the basis of everything, and finally that what one calls conscience is only inner vanity.

I have the handicap of being born with a special language to which I alone have the key.

I love good sense above all, perhaps because I have none.

I love my work with a frenetic and perverse love, as an ascetic loves the hair shirt which scratches his belly.

It seems to me that I have always existed and that I possess memories that date back to the Pharaohs.

Judge the goodness of a book by the energy of the punches it has given you. I believe the greatest characteristic of genius, is, above all, force.

Language is a cracked kettle on which we beat out tunes for bears to dance to, while all the time we long to move the stars to pity.

Life must be a constant education; one must learn everything, from speaking to dying.

Love is a springtime plant that perfumes everything with its hope, even the ruins to which it clings.

Madame Bovary is myself.

Nothing is more humiliating than to see idiots succeed in enterprises we have failed in.

Of all lies, art is the least untrue.

Of all possible debauches, traveling is the greatest that I know; that’s the one they invented when they got tired of all the others.

Oh, if I had been loved at the age of seventeen, what an idiot I would be today. Happiness is like smallpox: if you catch it too soon, it can completely ruin your constitution.

One arrives at style only with atrocious effort, with fanatical and devoted stubbornness.

One can be the master of what one does, but never of what one feels.

One must always hope when one is desperate, and doubt when one hopes.

One mustn’t always believe that feeling is everything. In the arts, it is nothing without form.

One mustn’t ask apple trees for oranges, France for sun, women for love, life for happiness.

One mustn’t look at the abyss, because there is at the bottom an inexpressible charm which attracts us.

One never tires of what is well written, style is life! It is the very blood of thought!

Our ignorance of history causes us to slander our own times.

Poetry is as precise a thing as geometry.

Read in order to live.

Read much, but not many books.

Reality does not conform to the ideal, but confirms it.

Stupidity is something unshakable; nothing attacks it without breaking itself against it; it is of the nature of granite, hard and resistant.

Style is as much under the words as in the words. It is as much the soul as it is the flesh of a work.

Success is a consequence and must not be a goal.

The art of writing is the art of discovering what you believe.

The artist must be in his work as God is in creation, invisible and all-powerful; one must sense him everywhere but never see him.

The author, in his work, must be like God in the Universe, present everywhere and visible nowhere.

The better a work is, the more it attracts criticism; it is like the fleas who rush to jump on white linens.

The cult of art gives pride; one never has too much of it.

The deplorable mania of doubt exhausts me. I doubt about everything, even my doubts.

The faster the word sticks to the thought, the more beautiful is the effect.

The future is the worst thing about the present.

The heart, like the stomach, wants a varied diet.

The more humanity advances, the more it is degraded.

The most glorious moments in your life are not the so-called days of success, but rather those days when out of dejection and despair you feel rise in you a challenge to life, and the promise of future accomplishments.

The only way to avoid being unhappy is to close yourself up in Art and to count for nothing all the rest.

The true poet for me is a priest. As soon as he dons the cassock, he must leave his family.

The whole dream of democracy is to raise the proletarian to the level of stupidity attained by the bourgeois.

There are neither good nor bad subjects. From the point of view of pure Art, you could almost establish it as an axiom that the subject is irrelevant, style itself being an absolute manner of seeing things.

There is no truth. There is only perception.

To be stupid, selfish, and have good health are three requirements for happiness, though if stupidity is lacking, all is lost.

What an elder sees sitting; the young can’t see standing.

What is the beautiful, if not the impossible.

Woman is a vulgar animal from whom man has created an excessively beautiful ideal.

Writing is a dog’s life, but the only life worth living.

You can calculate the worth of a man by the number of his enemies, and the importance of a work of art by the harm that is spoken of it.

Exit mobile version