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.
Gustave FlaubertRead
I am irritated by my own writing. I am like a violinist whose ear is true, but whose fingers refuse to reproduce precisely the sound he hears within.
Interpretation
The writer struggles to express their inner thoughts accurately through their writing.
Gustave Flaubert articulates the frustration that many artists experience when trying to translate their internal vision into their work. Like a skilled violinist who hears perfect music in their head but struggles to replicate it with their hands, Flaubert highlights the gap between creative intuition and execution, reflecting the broader challenge of artistic expression.
In practice
In a speech about artistic struggles at a book festival.
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.
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.
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.
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.
Stupidity is something unshakable; nothing attacks it without breaking itself against it; it is of the nature of granite, hard and resistant.
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.
That is why I believe that art is so much more significant than either economics or philosophy. It is the direct measure of man's spiritual vision.
Film spectators are quiet vampires.
I'm not a lawyer, but I do know this: we need to protect our ability to tell controversial stories.
The main rule of writing is that if you do it with enough assurance and confidence, youβre allowed to do whatever you like. (That may be a rule for life as well as for writing. But itβs definitely true for writing.) So write your story as it needs to be written. Write it honestly, and tell it as best you can. Iβm not sure that there are any other rules. Not ones that matter.
The sadness of the incomplete, the sadness that is often Life, but should never be Art.
The drama is complete poetry. The ode and the epic contain it only in germ; it contains both of them in a state of high development, and epitomizes both.
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