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Parenting & Family Quote by Gustave Flaubert

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

About this Quote

Flaubert’s line is a slap at two lazy alibis for reading: candy and credentialing. The first is childish, not because pleasure is bad, but because it’s passive consumption, a book as toy. The second is the bourgeois version of virtue-signaling: reading as self-improvement merchandise, a way to stack facts and polish status. Both, for Flaubert, miss the point because they treat literature as a means to something else.

“Read in order to live” turns the hierarchy upside down. Living isn’t what happens after the book has been “useful”; the book is where living gets clarified, intensified, and sometimes made unbearable. The intent is existential rather than moral: reading as a practice that enlarges perception, trains attention, and gives shape to experience that otherwise stays mushy or mute. It’s also an aesthetic manifesto from a novelist obsessed with the exact sentence. If life is chaotic, vulgar, repetitive - the stuff of Madame Bovary’s suffocations - then art is the discipline that makes that chaos legible without pretending it’s tidy.

The subtext is defensive, even a little snobbish: Flaubert protects literature from being reduced to entertainment or sermon. In 19th-century France, the rise of mass literacy and didactic “improving” texts threatened to domesticate the novel into a social instrument. He insists on a third category: reading as a way of being fully awake. Not escape, not homework - oxygen.

Quote Details

TopicBook
Source
Unverified source: Correspondance (Édition Conard), Tome IV (Gustave Flaubert, 1910)
Text match: 80.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
Vous me demandez quels livres lire. Lisez Montaigne, lisez-le lentement, posément ! Il vous calmera. Et n’écoutez pas les gens qui parlent de son égoïsme. Vous l’aimerez, vous verrez. Mais ne lisez pas, comme les enfants lisent, pour vous amuser, ni comme les ambitieux lisent, pour vous instruire...
Other candidates (1)
Readings for Reflective Teaching in Early Education (Jennifer Colwell, Andrew Pollard, 2015) compilation96.9%
... Gustave Flaubert in 1857: Do not read, as children do, to amuse yourself, or like the ambitious, for the purpose ...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Flaubert, Gustave. (2026, February 16). Do not read, as children do, to amuse yourself, or like the ambitious, for the purpose of instruction. No, read in order to live. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/do-not-read-as-children-do-to-amuse-yourself-or-15297/

Chicago Style
Flaubert, Gustave. "Do not read, as children do, to amuse yourself, or like the ambitious, for the purpose of instruction. No, read in order to live." FixQuotes. February 16, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/do-not-read-as-children-do-to-amuse-yourself-or-15297/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Do not read, as children do, to amuse yourself, or like the ambitious, for the purpose of instruction. No, read in order to live." FixQuotes, 16 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/do-not-read-as-children-do-to-amuse-yourself-or-15297/. Accessed 6 Mar. 2026.

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About the Author

Gustave Flaubert

Gustave Flaubert (December 12, 1821 - May 8, 1880) was a Novelist from France.

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