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2018-06-05 É¢ÎÄ

¡¡¡¡Ó¢ÓïÉ¢ÎÄÖÐÒ²Óкܶà¼ò¶ÌµÄÓÅÃÀ¶ÎÂäÖµµÃÉÍÎö£¬ÏÂÃæÊǹØÓÚÓÅÃÀÓ¢ÓïÉ¢ÎĶÎÂäÕª³­µÄÄÚÈÝ£¬»¶Ó­ÔĶÁ£¡

¡¡¡¡1¡¢A contented mind is the greatest blessing a man can enjoy in this world.

¡¡¡¡Öª×ãÊÇÈËÉúÔÚÊÀ×î´óµÄÐÒÊ¡£

¡¡¡¡¡ª¡ªJoseph Addison£¨ÃÀ¹ú×÷¼Ò°¬µÏÉú£©

¡¡¡¡2¡¢If you would know the value of money, go and try to borrow some.

¡¡¡¡ÒªÏëÖªµÀÇ®µÄ¼ÛÖµ£¬¾ÍÏë°ì·¨È¥½èÇ®ÊÔÊÔ¡£

¡¡¡¡¡ª¡ªBenjamin Franklin£¨ÃÀ¹ú×Üͳ¸»À¼¿ËÁÖ£©

¡¡¡¡3¡¢If you wish to succeed, you should use persistence as your good friend,

¡¡¡¡experience as your reference, prudence as your brother and hope as your sentry.

¡¡¡¡Èç¹ûÄãÏ£Íû³É¹¦£¬µ±ÒÔºãÐÄΪÁ¼ÓÑ£¬ÒÔ¾­ÑéΪ²Îı£¬ÒÔ½÷É÷ΪÐֵܣ¬ÒÔÏ£ÍûΪÉÚ±ø¡£

¡¡¡¡¡ª¡ªThomas Edison£¨ÃÀ¹ú·¢Ã÷¼Ò°®µÏÉú£©

¡¡¡¡4¡¢Health is certainly more valuable than money,

¡¡¡¡because it is by health that money is procured.

¡¡¡¡½¡¿µµ±È»±È½ðÇ®¸üÎªÖØÒª£¬ÒòΪÎÒÃÇËùÀµÒÔ»ñµÃ½ðÇ®µÄ¾ÍÊǽ¡¿µ¡£

¡¡¡¡¡ª¡ªSamuel Johnson£¨Ó¢¹ú×÷¼ÒÔ¼º²Ñ·£©

¡¡¡¡5¡¢That man is the richest whose pleasure are the cheapest.

¡¡¡¡ÄÜ´¦´¦Ñ°Çó¿ìÀÖµÄÈ˲ÅÊÇ×ÓеÄÈË¡£

¡¡¡¡¡ª¡ªHenry David Thoreau£¨ÃÀ¹ú×÷¼ÒËóÂÞ£©

¡¡¡¡6¡¢Sometimes one pays most for the things one gets for nothing.

¡¡¡¡ÓÐʱºòÒ»¸öÈËΪ²»»¨Ç®µÃµ½µÄ¶«Î÷¸¶³öµÄ´ú¼Û×î¸ß¡£

¡¡¡¡¡ª¡ªAlbert Einstein£¨ÃÀ¹ú¿ÆÑ§¼Ò°®Òò˹̹£©

¡¡¡¡7¡¢Will, work and wait are the pyramidal cornerstones for success.

¡¡¡¡ÒâÖ¾¡¢¹¤×÷ºÍµÈ´ýÊdzɹ¦µÄ½ð×ÖËþµÄ»ùʯ¡£

¡¡¡¡¡ª¡ªLouis Pasteur£¨·¨¹ú»¯Ñ§¼Ò°Í˹ÀÕ£©

¡¡¡¡8¡¢All the splendor in the world is not worth a good friend.

¡¡¡¡ÈËÊÀ¼äËùÓеÄÈÙ»ª¸»¹ó²»ÈçÒ»¸öºÃÅóÓÑ¡£

¡¡¡¡¡ª¡ªVoltaire£¨·¨¹ú˼Ïë¼Ò·ü¶ûÌ©£©

¡¡¡¡9¡¢There is a great different between exposure of

¡¡¡¡the mind and that of the body.

¡¡¡¡±í¶˼ÏëºÍչ¶ÉíÌåÖ®¼ä´æÔÚ¼«´óµÄ²»Í¬¡£

¡¡¡¡¡ª¡ªWilliam Hazlitt£¨Ó¢¹úÅúÆÀ¼ÒÉ¢Îļҹþ×ÌÀïÌØ£©

¡¡¡¡10¡¢To travel hopefully is a better thing than to arrive,

¡¡¡¡and the true success is to labor.

¡¡¡¡»³×ÅÏ£ÍûÈ¥ÂÃÐбȵִïÄ¿µÄµØ¸üÓä¿ì£»¶øÕæÕýµÄ³É¹¦ÔÚÓÚ¹¤×÷¡£

¡¡¡¡¡ª¡ªRobert Louis Stevenson£¨Ó¢¹ú×÷¼ÒÊ·µÙÎÄÉ­£©

¡¡¡¡11¡¢The greater a man is, the more distasteful is praise and flattery to him.

¡¡¡¡Ò»¸öÈËԽΰ´ó£¬¶Ô±íÑïºÍ·î³Ð¾ÍÔ½·´¸Ð¡£

¡¡¡¡¡ª¡ªJohn Burroughs£¨ÃÀ¹ú²©Îïѧ¼Ò°ÍÀÕ˹£©

¡¡¡¡12¡¢I might say that success is won by three things:

¡¡¡¡first, effort; second, more effort; third, still more effort.

¡¡¡¡¿ÉÒÔ˵³É¹¦Òª¿¿Èý¼þʲÅÄÜÓ®µÃ£ºÅ¬Á¦£¬Å¬Á¦£¬ÔÙŬÁ¦¡£

¡¡¡¡¡ª¡ªThomas Hardy£¨Ó¢¹úÊ«ÈËС˵¼Ò¹þ´ú£©

¡¡¡¡13¡¢Success often depends upon knowing how long it will take to succeed.

¡¡¡¡³É¹¦³£³£È¡¾öÓÚÖªµÀÐèÒª¶à¾Ã²ÅÄܳɹ¦¡£

¡¡¡¡¡ª¡ªCharles Montesquieu£¨·¨¹ú˼Ïë¼ÒÃϵÂ˹榣

¡¡¡¡14¡¢Only those who have the patience to do simple things

¡¡¡¡perfectly ever acquire the skill to do difficult things easily.

¡¡¡¡Ö»ÓÐÓÐÄÍÐÄÔ²ÂúÍê³É¼òµ¥¹¤×÷µÄÈË£¬²ÅÄܹ»Çá¶øÒ×¾ÙµÄÍê³ÉÀ§ÄѵÄÊ¡£

¡¡¡¡¡ª¡ªFriedrich Schiller£¨µÂ¹ú¾ç×÷¼ÒÊ«ÈËϯÀÕ£©

¡¡¡¡15¡¢You have to believe in yourself. That's the secret of success.

¡¡¡¡Äã±ØÐëÏàÐÅ×Ô¼º£¬ÕâÊdzɹ¦µÄ¹Ø¼ü¡£

¡¡¡¡¡ª¡ªCharles Chaplin£¨ÃÀ¹úÑÝԱ׿±ðÁÖ£©

¡¡¡¡16¡¢A man can succeed at almost anything for which

¡¡¡¡he has unlimited enthusiasm.

¡¡¡¡ÎÞÂÛºÎÊ£¬Ö»Òª¶ÔËüÓÐÎÞÏÞµÄÈÈÇéÄã¾ÍÄÜÈ¡µÃ³É¹¦¡£

¡¡¡¡¡ª¡ªC. M. Schwab£¨ÃÀ¹úʵҵ¼ÒÊ©Íß²¼£©

¡¡¡¡17¡¢The man who has made up his mind to win will never say ¡°impossible¡±.

¡¡¡¡·²ÊǾöÐÄÈ¡µÃʤÀûµÄÈËÊÇ´ÓÀ´²»Ëµ¡°²»¿ÉÄܵġ±¡£

¡¡¡¡¡ª¡ªBonapart Napoleon£¨·¨¹ú»ÊµÛÄÃÆÆÂØ£©

¡¡¡¡18¡¢Progress is the activity of today and the assurance of tomorrow.

¡¡¡¡½ø²½ÊǽñÌìµÄ»î¶¯£¬Ã÷ÌìµÄ±£Ö¤¡£

¡¡¡¡¡ª¡ªEmerson£¨ÃÀ¹ú˼Ïë¼Ò°®Ä¬Éú£©

¡¡¡¡20¡¢Our destiny offers not the cup of despair,

¡¡¡¡but the chalice of opportunity.

¡¡¡¡ÃüÔ˸øÓèÎÒÃǵIJ»ÊÇʧÍûÖ®¾Æ£¬¶øÊÇ»ú»áÖ®±­¡£

¡¡¡¡¡ª¡ªRichard Nixon£¨ÃÀ¹ú×ÜͳÄá¿ËËÉ£©

¡¡¡¡21¡¢Miracles sometimes occur, but one has to work terribly for them.

¡¡¡¡Ææ¼£ÓÐʱºòÊǻᷢÉúµÄ£¬µ«ÊÇÄãµÃΪ֮ƴÃüµÄŬÁ¦¡£

¡¡¡¡¡ª¡ªC. Weizmann£¨°®¶ûÀ¼×Üͳκ´ÄÂü£©

¡¡¡¡22¡¢It never will rain roses.

¡¡¡¡When we want to have more roses we must plant trees.

¡¡¡¡ÌìÉϲ»»áµôÏÂõ¹åÀ´£¬Èç¹ûÏëÒª¸ü¶àµÄõ¹å£¬±ØÐë×Ô¼ºÖÖÖ²¡£

¡¡¡¡¡ª¡ªG. Eliot£¨Ó¢¹úС˵¼Ò°¬ÂÔÌØ£©

¡¡¡¡23¡¢If you have great talents, industry will improve them;

¡¡¡¡if you have but moderate abilities, industry will supply their deficiency.

¡¡¡¡Èç¹ûÄãºÜÓÐÌ츳£¬ÇÚÃã»áʹÆä¸ü¼ÓÍêÉÆ£»Èç¹ûÄãÄÜÁ¦Ò»°ã£¬ÇÚÃã»á²¹×ãÆäȱÏÝ¡£

¡¡¡¡¡ª¡ªJoshuas Reynolds£¨ÃÀ¹úÉ¢ÎļÒÀ×ŵ×È£©

¡¡¡¡24¡¢Great works are performed not by strength , but by perseverance.

¡¡¡¡Íê³Éΰ´óµÄÊÂÒµ²»ÔÚÓÚÌåÁ¦£¬¶øÔÚÓÚ¼áÈͲ»°ÎµÄÒãÁ¦¡£

¡¡¡¡¡ª¡ªSamuel Johnson£¨Ó¢¹ú×÷¼ÒºÍÆÀÂÛ¼ÒÔ¼º²Ñ·£©

¡¡¡¡25¡¢Genius only means hard-working all one's life.

¡¡¡¡Ìì²ÅÖ»Òâζ×ÅÖÕÉí²»Ð¸µÄŬÁ¦¡£

¡¡¡¡¡ª¡ªMendeleyev£¨¶í¹ú»¯Ñ§¼ÒÃŽÝÁÐÒ®·ò£©

¡¡¡¡26¡¢Few things are impossible in themselves; and it is often for want of will ,

¡¡¡¡rather than of means, that man fails to succeed.

¡¡¡¡ÊÂÇéºÜÉÙÓÖ¸ù±¾×ö²»³ÉµÄ`£»ÆäËùÒÔ×ö²»³É£¬ÓëÆä˵ÊÇÌõ¼þ²»¹»£¬²»Èç˵ÊÇÓÉÓÚ¾öÐIJ»¹»¡£

¡¡¡¡¡ª¡ª£¨La Racheforcauld£¨·¨¹ú×÷¼ÒÂÞÇи£¿¼¶ûµÂ£©

¡¡¡¡27¡¢Dare and the world always yields.

¡¡¡¡If it beats you sometimes, dare it again and again and it will succumb.

¡¡¡¡´óµ¨ÌôÕ½£¬ÊÀ½ç×Ü»áÈò½¡£Èç¹ûÓÐʱºòÄã±»Ëü´ò°ÜÁË£¬²»¶ÏµØÌôÕ½£¬Ëü×Ü»áÇü·þµØ¡£

¡¡¡¡¡ª¡ªW.M Thackeray£¨Ó¢¹úС˵¼ÒÈø¿ËÀ×£©

¡¡¡¡28¡¢All that you do, do with your might; t

¡¡¡¡hings done by halves are never done right.

¡¡¡¡×öÒ»ÇÐÊÂÇé¶¼Ó¦¾¡Á¦¶øÎª£¬°ë;¶ø·ÏÓÀÔ¶²»ÐС£

¡¡¡¡¡ª¡ªR.H. Stoddard£¨ÃÀ¹úÊ«ÈË˹ÍдïµÂ£©

¡¡¡¡29¡¢A man can fail many times,

¡¡¡¡but he isn't a failure until he begins to blame somebody else.

¡¡¡¡Ò»¸öÈË¿ÉÒÔʧ°Ü¶à´Î£¬µ«ÊÇÖ»ÒªËûûÓпªÊ¼Ôð¹ÖÅÔÈË£¬Ëû»¹²»ÊÇÒ»¸öʧ°ÜÕß¡£

¡¡¡¡¡ª¡ªJ.Burroughs£¨ÃÀ¹ú²©Îïѧ¼Ò°ÍÀÕ˹£©

¡¡¡¡30¡¢You can tell the ideals of a nation by its advertisements.

¡¡¡¡´ÓÒ»¸ö¹ú¼ÒµÄ¹ã¸æ¿ÉÒÔ¿´³öÕâ¸ö¹ú¼ÒµÄÀíÏë¡£

¡¡¡¡¡ª¡ªNorman Douglas£¨Ó¢¹ú×÷¼ÒµÀ¸ñÀ­Ë¹£©

¡¡¡¡31¡¢The only limit to our realization of tomorrow will be our doubts of today.

¡¡¡¡ÊµÏÖÃ÷ÌìÀíÏëµÄΨһÕϰ­ÊǽñÌìµÄÒÉÂÇ¡£

¡¡¡¡¡ª¡ªFranklin Roosevelt£¨ÃÀ¹ú×ÜͳÂÞ˹¸££©

¡¡¡¡32¡¢The man with a new idea is a crank until the idea succeeds.

¡¡¡¡¾ßÓÐÐÂÏë·¨µÄÈËÔÚÆäÏ뷨ʵÏÖ֮ǰÊǸö¹ÖÈË¡£

¡¡¡¡¡ª¡ªMark Twain£¨ÃÀ¹ú×÷¼ÒÂí¿Ë£¿ÍÂΣ©

¡¡¡¡33¡¢The important thing in life is to have a great aim,

¡¡¡¡and the determination to attain it.

¡¡¡¡ÈËÉúÖØÒªµÄÊÂÇéÊÇÈ·¶¨Ò»¸öΰ´óµÄÄ¿±ê£¬²¢¾öÐÄʵÏÖËü¡£

¡¡¡¡¡ª¡ªJohann Wolfgang von Goethe£¨µÂ¹úÊ«ÈË¡¢¾ç×÷¼Ò¸èµÂ£©

¡¡¡¡34¡¢Most of the trouble in the world is caused by people wanting to be important.

¡¡¡¡ÈËÊÀ¼äµÄ´ó¶àÊý·³ÄÕ¶¼ÊÇÓÉÄÇЩÏë³ÉÎªÖØÒªÈËÎïµÄÈËÈdzöÀ´µÄ¡£

¡¡¡¡¡ª¡ªGeorge Eliot£¨Ó¢¹úС˵¼Ò°¬ÂÔÌØ£©

¡¡¡¡35¡¢If you doubt yourself,

¡¡¡¡then indeed you stand on shaky ground.

¡¡¡¡Èç¹ûÄ㻳ÒÉ×Ô¼º£¬ÄÇôÄãµÄÁ¢×ãµãȷʵ²»ÎȹÌÁË¡£

¡¡¡¡¡ª¡ªIbsen£¨Å²Íþ¾ç×÷¼ÒÒײ·Éú£©

¡¡¡¡36¡¢Ideal is the beacon. Without ideal,

¡¡¡¡there is no secure direction; without direction ,there is no life.

¡¡¡¡ÀíÏëÊÇָ·Ã÷µÆ¡£Ã»ÓÐÀíÏ룬¾ÍûÓмᶨµÄ·½Ïò£»

¡¡¡¡Ã»Óз½Ïò£¬¾ÍûÓÐÉú»î¡£ ¡ª¡ªLeo Tolstory£¨¶í¹ú×÷¼ÒÍжû˹̩£©

¡¡¡¡37¡¢Ideal are like the stars ¡ª¡ª- we never reach them ,

¡¡¡¡but like mariners , we chart our course by them.

¡¡¡¡ÀíÏëÓÌÈçÌìÉϵÄÐÇÐÇ£¬ÎÒÃÇÓÌÈçË®ÊÖ£¬Ëä²»ÄÜ´ïµ½ÌìÉÏ£¬

¡¡¡¡µ«ÊÇÎÒÃǵĺ½³Ì¿Éƾ½èËüÖ¸Òý¡£

¡¡¡¡¡ª¡ªCarl Schurz£¨ÃÀ¹úÕþÖμÒÊæ¶û´Ä£©

¡¡¡¡38¡¢Have an aim in life, or your energies will all be wasted.

¡¡¡¡ÈËÉúÓ¦¸ÃÊ÷Á¢Ä¿±ê£¬·ñÔòÄãµÄ¾«Éñ»á°×°×ÀË·Ñ¡£

¡¡¡¡¡ª¡ªR. Peters£¨ÃÀ¹ú·¨Ñ§¼Ò±ËµÃ˹£©

¡¡¡¡39¡¢Don't part with yourxxxs, When they are gone you may still exist,

¡¡¡¡but you have ceased to live.

¡¡¡¡²»Òª·ÅÆúÄãµÄ»ÃÏë¡£µ±»ÃÏëûÓÐÁËÒÔºó£¬Ä㻹¿ÉÒÔÉú´æ£¬µ«ÊÇÄãËäÉúÓÌËÀ¡£

¡¡¡¡¡ª¡ªMark Twain£¨Âí¿Ë ÍÂΣ©

¡¡¡¡40¡¢Do not, for one repulse,

¡¡¡¡give up the purpose that you resolved to effect.

¡¡¡¡²»ÒªÖ»ÒòÒ»´Îʧ°Ü£¬¾Í·ÅÆúÄãÔ­À´¾öÐÄÏëÒª´ïµ½µÄÄ¿µÄ¡£

¡¡¡¡¡ª¡ªWillian Shakespeare£¨É¯Ê¿±ÈÑÇ£©

¡¡¡¡41¡¢Between the ideal and the reality,

¡¡¡¡Between the motion and the act, Fall the shadow.

¡¡¡¡ÀíÏëÓëÏÖʵ֮¼ä£¬¶¯»úÓëÐÐΪ֮¼ä£¬×ÜÓÐÒ»µÀÒõÓ°¡£

¡¡¡¡¡ª¡ªThomas Stearns Eliot£¨T.S.°®ÂÔÌØ£©

¡¡¡¡42¡¢A man is not old as long as he is seeking something.

¡¡¡¡A man is not old until regrets take the place of dreams.

¡¡¡¡Ö»ÒªÓÐÒ»¸öÈË»¹ÓÐËù×·Çó£¬Ëû¾ÍûÓÐÀÏ¡£Ö±µ½ºó»ÚÈ¡´úÁËÃÎÏ룬һ¸öÈ˲ÅËãÀÏ¡£

¡¡¡¡¡ª¡ªJ. Barrymore£¨°ÍÀïĶû£©

¡¡¡¡43¡¢Change as change is mere flux and lapse; it insults intelligence. Genuinely to know is to grasp a permanent end that realises itself through changes.

¡¡¡¡Èç¹û½ö½ö¾Í±ä»¯Â۱仯£¬ÔòÖ»ÊDZ䶯²»î¿£¬Ù¿ºö¼´ÊÅ£»ÕâÊǵÍÄܵıíÏÖ£¬ÕæÕýÁ˽â±ä»¯ÔÚÓÚ°ÑÎÕסÔڱ仯ÖÐÍê³É×ÔÉíµÄÓÀºãÄ¿±ê¡£

¡¡¡¡¡ª¡ªJohn Dewey Ô¼º²¡¤¶ÅÍþ

¡¡¡¡44¡¢Change is the law of life. And those who look only to the past or the present are certain to miss the future.

¡¡¡¡±ä»¯ÊÇÉú»îµÄ·¨Ôò¡£Ö»¶¢×ŹýÈ¥»òÑÛǰµÄÈË×¢¶¨Ê§È¥Î´À´¡£

¡¡¡¡¡ª¡ªJohn F.Kennedy Ô¼º²¡¤¸¥¡¤¿ÏÄáµÏ

¡¡¡¡45¡¢Genius is formed in quiet, character in the stream of human life.

¡¡¡¡Ìì²ÅÇÄÎÞÉùÏ¢µØµ®Éú£¬ÐÔÇéÈ´ÔÚÉúÃüÖ®ºÓÀïÖð½¥Ðγɡ£

¡¡¡¡¡ª¡ªGoethe ¸èµÂ

¡¡¡¡46¡¢With a character both proud and timid, one never amounts to anything.

¡¡¡¡Ò»¸öÈ˼È×Ô°ÁÓÖµ¨ÇÓ£¬½«ÓÀÔ¶Ò»ÊÂÎ޳ɡ£

¡¡¡¡¡ª¡ªJoseph Roux Լɪ·ò¡¤Â³

¡¡¡¡47¡¢If there is anything that we wish to change the child, we should first examine it and see whether it is not something that could better be changed in ourselves.

¡¡¡¡¼ÙÈçÎÒÃÇÏëÈú¢×ÓÔÚij¸ö·½ÃæÓÐËù¸Ä±ä£¬ÎÒÃÇÓ¦Ê×ÏȼìÑéһϣ¬¿´¿´ÎÒÃÇ×Ô¼ºÊÇ·ñ×îºÃÔÚÕâÒ»·½Ãæ±äÒ»±ä¡£

¡¡¡¡¡ª¡ªJung ÈÙ¸ñ

¡¡¡¡48¡¢The finest inheritance you can give to a child is to allow it to make its own way, completely on its own feet.

¡¡¡¡ÄãÄÜÁô¸øº¢×ÓµÄ×îºÃ²Æ²úιýÓÚÔÊÐíËûÍêÈ«¶ÀÁ¢×ÔÖ÷µØÃþË÷×Ô¼ºµÄµÀ·¡£

¡¡¡¡¡ª¡ªIsadora Duncan ÒÁɯ¶àÀ­¡¤µË¿Ï

¡¡¡¡49¡¢Man's highest merit always is, as much as possible, to rule external circumstances and as little as possible to let himself be ruled by them.

¡¡¡¡ÈË×î´óµÄÓŵãÊǾ¡¿ÉÄÜ¶àµØ¼ÝÔ¦Íⲿ»·¾³£¬¾¡¿ÉÄÜÉÙµØÈû·¾³Ô¼Êø×Ô¼º¡£

¡¡¡¡¡ª¡ªGoethe ¸èµÂ

¡¡¡¡50¡¢Don't wait for ideal circumstances, they will never come, nor for the best opportunities.

¡¡¡¡²»ÒªµÈºò×îºÃµÄÌõ¼þ»òÕß×î¼Ñʱ»ú£¬ËüÃÇÓÀÔ¶²»»á½µÁÙ¡£

¡¡¡¡¡ª¡ªJanet Erskine Stuart ÕäÄáÌØ¡¤¶ò˹½ð¡¤Ë¹Í¼ÑÇÌØ

¡¡¡¡51¡¢Some people will never learn anything for this reason, because they understand everything too soon.

¡¡¡¡ÓÐЩÈËÓÀԶѧ²»µ½Ê²Ã´¶«Î÷£¬Ô­ÒòÔÚÓÚËûÃÇʲô¶¼Àí½âµÃÌ«¿ì¡£

¡¡¡¡¡ª¡ªAlexander Pope ÑÇÀúɽ´ó¡¤ÆÑ°Ø

¡¡¡¡52¡¢To think justly, we must understand what others mean; to know the value of our thoughts, we must try their effect on other minds.

¡¡¡¡ÒªÕýÈ·µØË¼¿¼£¬ÎÒÃÇÐëÁìÎò±ðÈ˵ÄÒâ˼£»ÏëÖªµÀ×Ô¼º¼û½âµÄ¼ÛÖµ£¬ÎÒÃÇÐë¼ìÑéËüÃǶԱðÈËÓкÎÓ°Ïì¡£

¡¡¡¡¡ª¡ªWilliam Hazlitt ÍþÁ®¡¤ºÚ×ÈÀûÌØ

¡¡¡¡53¡¢No men is an island, entire of itself; every man is a piece of the continent.

¡¡¡¡Ã»ÓÐÈËÊÇÍêÈ«¹ÂÁ¢µÄµºÓ죬ÿÈ˶¼Êǹ¹³É´ó½µÄһС¿é¡£

¡¡¡¡¡ª¡ªJohn Donne Ô¼º²¡¤µË¶÷

¡¡¡¡54¡¢No man can have society upon his own terms. If he seeks it, he must serve it too.

¡¡¡¡Ã»ÓÐÈËÄÜÈÃÉç»á·þ´Ó¸öÈ˵ÄÒâÖ¾¡£ÌÈÈôËûÏëѰÇó·ûºÏÐÄÒâµÄÉç»á£¬Ò²±ØÐë·þÎñÓÚËü¡£

¡¡¡¡¡ª¡ªEmerson °®Ä¬Éú

¡¡¡¡55¡¢Customary use of artifice is the sign of a small mind, and it almost always happens that he who uses it to cover one spot uncovers himself in another.

¡¡¡¡Ï°¹ß×ö¼ÙÊÇСÈ˵ÄÌØµã£¬µ«³£³£ÊÇijÈË×ö¼ÙÕÚסÁËÒ»¸öÎ۵㣬ȴÔÚÁíÒ»´¦Â¶ÁËÂí½Å¡£

¡¡¡¡¡ª¡ªLa Rochefoucauld À­ÂÞʲ¸£¿Æ

¡¡¡¡56¡¢Everyone is a moon and has a dark side which he never shows to anybody.

¡¡¡¡Ã¿¸öÈ˶¼ÊÇÒ»ÂÖÔÂÁÁ£¬¶¼ÓкڰµµÄ¡¢´Ó²»Ê¾È˵ÄÒ»Ãæ¡£

¡¡¡¡¡ª¡ªMark Twain Âí¿Ë¡¤ÍÂÎÂ

¡¡¡¡57¡¢The smaller the mind the greater the conceit.

¡¡¡¡Ë¼ÏëÔ½ÏÁ°¯£¬×Ô¸ºÔ½ÅòÕÍ¡£

¡¡¡¡¡ª¡ªÒÁË÷

¡¡¡¡58¡¢What is the first business of philosophy? To part with self-conceit. For it is impossible for any one to begin to learn what he thinks that he already knows.

¡¡¡¡ÕÜѧµÄÊ×ÒªÈÎÎñÊÇʲô£¿ÊÇͬ×Ô¸º¾öÁÑ¡£ÒòΪÈκÎÈ˶¼²»¿ÉÄÜ×ÅÊÖȥѧ×ÔÒÔΪÒѾ­ÕÆÎյĶ«Î÷¡£

¡¡¡¡¡ª¡ªEpictetus °®±È¿ËÌ©µÂ

¡¡¡¡59¡¢Victory at all costs, victory in spite of all terror, victory however long and hard the road may be; for without victory there is no survival.

¡¡¡¡²»Ï§Ò»Çдú¼Û¶áȡʤÀû£¬²»Î·ÈκοֲÀ¶áȡʤÀû¡£²»ÂÛµÀ·¶àôÂþ³¤£¬¶àôÆéá«£¬Ò»¶¨Òª¶áȡʤÀû£¡ÒòΪûÓÐʤÀû¾Í²»ÄÜÉú´æ¡£

¡¡¡¡¡ª¡ªSir Winston Churchill ÎÂ˹¶Ù¡¤Ç𼪶û

¡¡¡¡60¡¢The God of Victory is said to be one-handed, but peace gives victory to both sides.

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