Deep down in her heart, she was waiting and waiting for something to happen. Like a shipwrecked mariner, she gazed out wistfully over the wide solitude of her life, if so be she might catch the white gleam of a sail away on the dim horizon. She knew not what it would be, this longed-for barque; what wind would waft it to her, or to what shores it would bear her away. She knew not if it would be a shallop or a three-decker, burdened with anguish or freighted with joy. But every morning when she awoke she hoped it would come that day. She listened to every sound, started swiftly from her bed, and could not understand why nothing happened. And then at sunset, more sad at heart than ever, she would long for the morrow to come.
(Madame Bovary, 1856)

Gustave Flaubert

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

Gustave Flaubert (Letter to Louise Colet, 1852)

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

Gustave Flaubert

If you knew all the dreams I've dreamed!

Gustave Flaubert (Madame Bovary, 1856)

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