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One mustn't ask apple trees for oranges, France for sun, women for love, life for happiness.
Gustave Flaubert
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Interpretation

What this quote means

This quote emphasizes the importance of realistic expectations and recognizing that different entities provide different outcomes.

Gustave Flaubert's quote suggests that one should not expect specific results from sources that do not naturally offer them. Just as one cannot ask apple trees to produce oranges, it is unreasonable to seek certain things from life or from others that they are not intrinsically designed to provide. This serves as a reminder to align our expectations with reality and to appreciate the unique qualities that each aspect of life can offer.

Themes

ExpectationsHappinessRealismLifeLove

In practice

Example use cases

This quote can be used in a motivational speech about managing expectations.

More from Gustave Flaubert

In my view, the novelist has no right to express his opinions on the things of this world. In creating, he must imitate God: do his job and then shut up.
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She loved the sea for its storms alone, cared for vegetation only when it grew here and there among ruins. She had to extract a kind of personal advantage from things and she rejected as useless everything that promised no immediate gratification β€” for her temperament was more sentimental than artistic, and what she was looking for was emotions, not scenery.
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In the dark room a cloud of yellow dust flew from beneath the tool like a scatter of sparks from under the hooves of a galloping horse. The twin wheels turned and hummed. Binet was smiling, his chin down, his nostrils distended. He seemed lost in the kind of happiness which, as a rule, accompanies only those mediocre occupations that tickle the intelligence with easy difficulties, and satisfy it with a sense of achievement beyond which there is nothing left for dreams to feed on.
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It is a delicious thing to write, to be no longer yourself but to move in an entire universe of your own creating. Today, for instance, as man and woman, both lover and mistress, I rode in a forest on an autumn afternoon under the yellow leaves, and I was also the horses, the leaves, the wind, the words my people uttered, even the red sun that made them almost close their love-drowned eyes.
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Stupidity is something unshakable; nothing attacks it without breaking itself against it; it is of the nature of granite, hard and resistant.
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Whatever the thing you wish to say, there is but one word to express it, but one verb to give it movement, but one adjective to qualify it; you must seek until you find this noun, this verb, this adjective.
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