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名人大学励志演讲稿(精选多篇)

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名人大学励志演讲稿(精选多篇)
第一篇:名人英文励志演讲稿第二篇:名人励志演讲稿~第三篇:名人名校励志英语演讲稿第四篇:名人大学演讲稿第五篇:名人励志更多相关范文

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第一篇:名人英文励志演讲稿

新一代大学英语四六级领军人物,英语专家、文化学者、出版人、策划人,“振宇英语”创始人,当当网外语图书热门作者。

外语教学与研究出版社、北京航空航天大学出版社、大连理工大学出版社、海豚出版社、首都师范大学出版社、中国宇航出版社等国内一流出版社“振宇英语”丛书主编。外研社荣誉作者、当当网外语图书热门作者。

曾任国家级媒体记者、翻译、电台英语节目主持人、“振宇英语”专栏撰稿人、大学英语系主任、大学英语专业特聘专家教授。

率领振宇英语团队目前出版发行“振宇英语”系列图书200多个品种,总发行量累计约3000万册,部分图书成为全国近xx所高校馆藏珍典,还有多册图书成为知名大学硕士研究生和博生研究生入学考试指定参考书目,影响深远。

序言

对于英语学习者来说,多听多看多练英语演讲是学地道英语的最佳有效途径之一,也是训练语音语调最有效的辅助手段。你不用担心这些演讲是否有语法问题,也不用担心用词是否准确,表达是否到位。因为一些名人的演讲稿通常是字斟句酌精心完成的。此外,通过演讲学英语还可以潜移默化地帮助自己提升对英文的驾驭能力,增强英语的语感和美感。

本书精选了19篇具有代表性的名人的英语演讲。这些名人或是国家领袖,或是关心民权民生的政治人物,或是创造经济财富的精英,或是用文字抒发情怀的作家记者,或是演艺界的娱乐名人。他们都在自己的领域里作出了杰出的贡献。他们思想深刻,见解独到,注定是站在时代前列的人。

这些名人的演讲充满了智慧,富含启迪。它们或是结合自身经历立足于个人发展的谆谆教诲,像亚马逊ceo杰夫·贝索斯在普林斯顿大学演讲,他讲了自己创业的故事,以此鼓励毕业生:未来掌握在自己的手中,追寻自己的梦想,慎重选择;或是号召民众面对困难迎难而上,像美国第32任总统富兰克林·罗斯福,他就任于美国经济大萧条时期,国内民生凋敝,萎靡不振,他告诉大家,我们惟一害怕的是害怕本身,展示了带领民众走出低谷的豪情;或者充满人文关怀,如美国著名作家威廉·福克纳,站在人类精神的高度,勉励作家文人心中时时充满爱、怜悯、同情和牺牲的精神;或是显示了追求自由平等的决心,如马钉路德·金和南非总统曼德拉,他们在演讲中都表达了誓死捍卫民-主和自由的决心;或是显示了对家庭的爱,并把这种爱升华为“老吾老,以及人之老;幼吾幼,以及人之幼”,如米歇尔·奥巴马,她在演讲中表达了对家庭的热爱,同时也为丈夫竞选呐喊助威----如果巴拉克·奥巴马当选总统,将会保证每个美国人都能享受卫生保健,确保本国的每个孩子都能得到世界一流的教育。精选出的这些演讲名篇题材涉猎广泛,风格迥异。无论你是被其恢宏的气势所震撼,还是被其精深的意蕴所折服,亦或是为其诙谐幽默而莞尔,都能感受到演讲者所传递的共同心声:一定要奋发向上,积极进取,做出个人应有的成绩,为时代,为国家做贡献。

随书赠送的mp3演讲音频,为演讲者的原声音频。这些声音铿锵有力,或给你启迪,或让你感动,或给你温暖,或激发你前行的信念。同时,也让你更有机会品味最地道的英语表达。此外,在每一篇文章之后,都附有提炼出的演讲中具有指引性、励志性的“经典语录”,方便模仿与背诵。地道实用的英语学得多了积累得多了,你就能很自然地表达出极为纯正的英语,既能提升你的书面语表达能力,也可以提升你的口语表达能力。

准备好了吗?让我们从现在开始,去聆听那些温暖人心的声音吧!

第二篇:名人励志演讲稿~

1、奥斯特洛夫斯基

命运对奥斯特洛夫斯基是残酷的:他念过三年国小,青春消逝在疾驰的战马与枪林弹雨中。16岁时,他腹部与头部严重负伤,右眼失明。20岁时,又因关节硬化而卧床不起。面对着命运的严峻挑战,他深切地感到:“在生活中没比掉队更可怕的事情了。”奥斯特洛夫斯基与命运进行了英勇的抗争:他不想躺在残废荣誉军人的功劳簿上向祖国和人民伸手,他用沸腾的精力读完了函授大学的全部课程,如饥似渴地阅读俄罗斯与世界文学名著。书籍召唤他前进,书籍陪伴他披荆斩棘。

奥斯特洛夫斯基思想的烈马,驰骋在乌克兰与波兰交界的辽阔的原野上,他口授的每一个字母都像无情的子弹,射向入侵的德国强盗。

2.张海迪

1955年秋天在济南出生。5岁患脊髓病,胸以下全部瘫痪。从那时起,张海迪开始了她独到的人生。她无法上学,便在在家自学完中学课程。 在残酷的命运挑战面前,张海迪没有沮丧和沉沦 ,她以顽强的毅力和恒心与疾病做斗争,经受了严峻的考验,对人生充满了信心。她虽然没有机会走进校门,却发愤学习,学完了国小、中学全部课程,自学了大学英语、日语、德语和世界语,并攻读了大学和硕士研究生的课程。为了对社会作出更大的贡献,她先后自学了十几种医学专著,同时向有经验的医生请教,学会了针灸等医术,为群众无偿治疗

达1万多人次。

我们都是四肢健全的人,所以更我们应该珍惜眼前的学习机会。

3. 爱迪生

在爱迪生发明灯泡的时候他失败了很多次 ,当他用到一千多种材料做灯丝的时候,助手对他说:“你已经失败了一千多次了,成功已经变得渺茫,还是放弃吧!”但爱迪生却说:“到现在我的收获还不错,起码我发现有一千多种材料不能做灯丝。”最后,他经过六千多次的实验终于成功了。

我们可以试想,如果爱迪生在助手劝他停止实验的时候放弃了,我们现在会怎么样呢?可能我们还要点只有豆粒般大小的油灯在夜里照明。其实爱迪生的每次试验失败都可以看作是挫折。这么一算,爱迪生发明电灯也就是遇上了六千多次的挫折,这是一个多么惊人的数目啊!

4.林肯

生下来就一贫如洗的林肯,终其一生都在面对挫败,八次竞选八次落败,两次经商失败,甚至还精神崩溃过一次。好多次,他本可以放弃,但他并没有如此,也正因为 他没有放弃,才成为美国历史上最伟大的总统之一。此路艰辛而泥泞。我一只脚滑了一下,另一只脚也因而站不稳;但我缓口气,告诉自己,"这不过是滑一跤,并不是死去而爬

不起来。" ——林肯在竞选参议员落败后如是说

我们有的时候受到一次挫折,或经受到一次失败,就灰心丧气,认为自己一无是处,看看爱迪生和林肯,我们就会明白人的一生不是一帆风顺的,关键是学会坚持,永不放弃。

4.霍金

随着年龄渐长,小霍金对万事万物如何运行开始感兴趣起来,他经常把东西拆散以追根究底,但在把它们恢复组装回去时,他却束手无策,不过,他的父母并没有因此而责罚他,他的父亲甚至给他担任起数学和物理学“教练”。在十三四岁时,霍金发现自己对物理学方面的研究非常有兴趣,虽然中学物理学太容易太浅显,显得特别枯燥,但他认为这是最基础的科学,有望解决人们从何处来和为何在这里的问题。从此,霍金开始了真正的科学探索。,如饥似渴的投入到学习和研究当中,并最终成为一代大师,给不看好他的人当头棒喝。

霍金虽然身体的残疾越来越重,但却力图像普通人一样生活,完成自己所能做的任何事情。他甚至是活泼好动的——这听起来有些好笑,在他已经完全无法移动之后,他仍然坚持用唯一可以活动的手指驱动着轮椅在前往办公室的路上“横冲直撞”;

·威廉·霍金认为他一生的贡献是在经典物理的框架里,证明了黑洞和大爆炸奇点的不可避免性,黑洞越变越大;但在量子物理的框架里,他指出,黑洞因辐射而越变越小,大爆炸的奇点不断被量子效应所抹平,而且整个宇宙正是起始于此。

第三篇:名人名校励志英语演讲稿

dare to compete, dare to care 敢于竞争,勇于关爱---美国国务卿希拉里·克林顿耶鲁大学演讲

dare to compete. dare to care. dare to dream. dare to love. practice the art of making possible. and no matter what happens, even if you hear shouts behind, keep going. 要敢于竞争,敢于关爱,敢于憧憬,大胆去爱!要努力创造奇迹!无论发生什么,即使有人在你背后大声喊叫,也要勇往直前。

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it is such an honor and pleasure for me to be back at yale, especially on the occasion of the 300th anniversary. i have had so many memories of my time here, and as nick was speaking i thought about how i ended up at yale law school. and it tells a little bit about how much progress we’ve made.

what i think most about when i think of yale is not just the politically charged atmosphere and not even just the superb legal education that i received. it was at yale that i began work that has been at the core of what i have cared about ever since. i began working with new haven legal services representing children. and i studied child development, abuse and neglect at the yale new haven hospital and the child study center. i was lucky enough to receive a civil rights internship with marian wright edelman at the children’s defense fund, where i went to work after i graduated. those experiences fueled in me a passion to work for the benefit of children, particularly the most vulnerable.

now, looking back, there is no way that i could have predicted what path my life would have taken. i didn’t sit around the law school, saying, well, you know, i think i’ll graduate and then i’ll go to work at the children’s defense fund, and then the impeachment inquiry, and nixon retired or resigns, i’ll go to arkansas. i didn’t think like that. i was taking each day at a time.

but, i’ve been very fortunate because i’ve always had an idea in my mind about what i thought was important and what gave my life meaning and purpose. a set of values and beliefs that have helped me navigate the shoals, the sometimes very treacherous sea, to illuminate my own true desires, despite that others say about what l should care about and believe in. a passion to succeed at what l thought was important and children have always provided that lone star, that guiding light. because l have that absolute conviction that every child, especially in this, the most blessed of nations that has ever existed on the face of earth, that every child deserves the opportunity to live up to his or her god-given potential.

but you know that belief and conviction-it may make for a personal mission statement, but standing alone, not translated into action, it means very little to anyone else, particularly to those for whom you have those concerns.

when i was thinking about running for the united states senate-which was such an enormous decision to make, one i never could have dreamed that i would have been making when i was

here on campus-i visited a school in new york city and i met a young woman, who was a star athlete.

i was there because of billy jean king promoting an hbo special about women in sports called “dare to compete.” it was about title ix and how we finally, thanks to government action, provided opportunities to girls and women in sports.

and although i played not very well at intramural sports, i have always been a strong supporter of women in sports. and i was introduced by this young woman, and as i went to shake her hand she obviously had been reading the newspapers about people saying i should or shouldn’t run for the senate. and i was congratulating her on the speech she had just made and she held onto my hand and she said, “dare to compete, mrs. clinton. dare to compete.”

i took that to heart because it is hard to compete sometimes, especially in public ways, when your failures are there for everyone to see and you don’t know what is going to happen from one day to the next. and yet so much of life, whether we like to accept it or not, is competing with ourselves to be the best we can be, being involved in classes or professions or just life, where we know we are competing with others.

i took her advice and i did compete because i chose to do so. and the biggest choices that you’ll face in your life will be yours alone to make. i’m sure you’ll receive good advice. you’re got a great education to go back and reflect about what is right for you, but you eventually will have to choose and i hope that you will dare to compete. and by that i don’t mean the kind of cutthroat competition that is too often characterized by what is driving america today. i mean the small voice inside you that says to you, you can do it, you can take this risk, you can take this next step.

and it doesn’t mean that once having made that choice you will always succeed. in fact, you won’t. there are setbacks and you will experience difficult disappointments. you will be slowed down and sometimes the breath will just be knocked out of you. but if you carry with you the values and beliefs that you can make a difference in your own life, first and foremost, and then in the lives of others. you can get back up, you can keep going.

but it is also important, as i have found, not to take yourself too seriously, because after all, every one of us here today, none of us is deserving of full credit. i think every day of the blessings my birth gave me without any doing of my own. i chose neither my family nor my country, but they as much as anything i’ve ever done, determined my course.

you compare my or your circumstances with those of the majority of people who’ve ever lived or who are living right now, they too often are born knowing too well what their futures will be. they lack the freedom to choose their life’s path. they’re imprisoned by circumstances of poverty and ignorance, bigotry, disease, hunger, oppression and war.

so, dare to compete, yes, but maybe even more difficult, dare to care. dare to care about people who need our help to succeed and fulfill their own lives. there are so many out there and

sometimes all it takes is the simplest of gestures or helping hands and many of you understand that already. i know that the numbers of graduates in the last 20 years have worked in community organizations, have tutored, have committed themselves to religious activities.

you have been there trying to serve because you have believed both that it was the right thing to do and because it gave something back to you. you have dared to care.

well, dare to care to fight for equal justice for all, for equal pay for women, against hate crimes and bigotry. dare to care about public schools without qualified teachers or adequate resources. dare to care about protecting our environment. dare to care about the 10 million children in our country who lack health insurance. dare to care about the one and a half million children who have a parent in jail. the seven million people who suffer from hiv/aids. and thank you for caring enough to demand that our nation do more to help those that are suffering throughout this world with hiv/aids, to prevent this pandemic from spreading even further.

and i’ll also add, dare enough to care about our political process. you know, as i go and speak with students i’m impressed so much, not only in formal settings, on campuses, but with my daughter and her friends, about how much you care, about how willing you are to volunteer and serve. you may have missed the last wave of the revolution, but you’ve understood that the unity revolution is there for you every single day. and you’ve been willing to be part of remarking lives in our community.

and yet, there is a real resistance, a turning away from the political process. i hope that some of you will be public servants and will even run for office yourself, not to win a position to make and impression on your friends at your 20th reunion, but because you understand how important it is for each of us as citizens to make a commitment to our democracy.

your generation, the first one born after the social upheavals of the 60’s and 70’s, in the midst of the technological advances of the 80’s and 90’s, are inheriting an economy, a society and a government that has yet to understand fully, or even come to grips with, our rapidly changing world.

and so bring your values and experiences and insights into politics. dare to help make, not just a difference in politics, but create a different politics. some have called you the generation of choice. you’ve been raised with multiple choice tests, multiple channels, multiple websites and multiple lifestyles. you’ve grown up choosing among alternatives that were either not imagined, created or available to people in prior generations.

you’ve been invested with far more personal power to customize your life, to make more free choices about how to live than was ever thought possible. and i think as i look at all the surveys and research that is done, your choices reflect not only freedom, but personal responsibility.

the social indicators, not the headlines, the social indicators tell a positive story: drug use and cheating and arrests being down, been pregnancy and suicides, drunk driving deaths being down.

community service and religious involvement being up. but if you look at the area of voting among 18 to 29 year olds, the numbers tell a far more troubling tale. many of you i know believe that service and community volunteerism is a better way of solving the issues facing our country than political engagement, because you believe-choose one of the following multiples or choose them all-government either can’t understand or won’t make the right choices because of political pressures, inefficiency, incompetence or big money influence.

well, i admit there is enough truth in that critique to justify feeling disconnected and alienated. but at bottom, that’s a personal cop-out and a national peril. political conditions maximize the conditions for individual opportunity and responsibility as well as community. americorps and the peace corps exist because of political decisions. our air, water, land and food will be clean and safe because of political choices. our ability to cure disease or log onto the internet have been advanced because of politically determined investments. ethnic cleansing in kosovo ended because of political leadership. your parents and grandparents traveled here by means of government built and subsidized transportation systems. many used gi bills or government loans, as i did, to attend college.

now, i could, as you might guess, go on and on, but the point is to remind us all that government is us and each generation has to stake its claim. and, as stakeholders, you will have to decide whether or not to make the choice to participate. it is hard and it is, bringing change in a democracy, particularly now. there’s so much about our modern times that conspire to lower our sights, to weaken our vision-as individuals and communities and even nations.

it is not the vast conspiracy you may have heard about; rather it’s a silent conspiracy of cynicism and indifference and alienation that we see every day, in our popular culture and in our prodigious consumerism.

but as many have said before and as vaclav havel has said to memorably, “it cannot suffice just to invent new machines, new regulations and new institutions. it is necessary to understand differently and more perfectly the true purpose of our existence on this earth and of our deeds.” and i think we are called on to reject, in this time of blessings that we enjoy, those who will tear us apart and tear us down and instead to liberate our god-given spirit, by being willing to dare to dream of a better world.

during my campaign, when times were tough and days were long i used to think about the example of harriet tubman, a heroic new yorker, a 19th century moses, who risked her life to bring hundreds of slaves to freedom. she would say to those who she gathered up in the south where she kept going back year after year from the safety of auburn, new york, that no matter what happens, they had to keep going. if they heard shouts behind them, they ha(内容来源好 范文网)d to keep going. if they heard gunfire or dogs, they had to keep going to freedom. well, those aren’t the risks we face. it is more the silence and apathy and indifference that dogs our heels.

thirty-two years ago, i spoke at my own graduation from wellesley, where i did call on my fellow classmates to reject the notion of limitations on our ability to effect change and instead to

embrace the idea that the goal of education should be human liberation and the freedom to practice with all the skill of our being the art of making possible.

for after all, our fate is to be free. to choose competition over apathy, caring over indifference, vision over myopia, and love over hate.

just as this is a special time in your lives, it is for me as well because my daughter will be graduating in four weeks, graduating also from a wonderful place with a great education and beginning a new life. and as i think about all the parents and grandparents who are out there, i have a sense of what their feeling. their hearts are leaping with joy, but it’s hard to keep tears in check because the presence of our children at a time and place such as this is really a fulfillment of our own american dreams. well, i applaud you and all of your love, commitment and hard work, just as i applaud your daughters and sons for theirs.

and i leave these graduates with the same message i hope to leave with my graduate. dare to compete. dare to care. dare to dream. dare to love. practice the art of making possible. and no matter what happens, even if you hear shouts behind, keep going.

thank you and god bless you all.

第四篇:名人大学演讲稿

名人大学演讲稿

贺各位毕业同学完成学业。在今天这个令人兴奋的早上,正好是思考未来的美好时刻。

在过去几年的校园生活中,你们投入了大量的时间和精力,取得学位。汕大的核心理念是培育你们成为慎思明辨、有原则、能独立思考的人。大学致力扩展你们的智慧领域,令你们领会人世间多元契机和其永恒的挑战,也重视建立你们的“自觉力”,因为认识自己的兴趣和能力是一件非常重要的事。

你们每一个都是果敢、与众不同、具思考和独立性的人,有能力做到一些别人只能梦想的事情;你们永远抱着好奇和追求真理的心,有坚定的信念敢于挑战你们不认同的所谓真理、阐述你们的观点,和在适当时刻挺身而出,揭破“皇帝的新衣”。你们有成功的决心,但成功内涵还有更多关键。

在今天,我想和大家分享我的一项秘诀,那是终生指引我能凭仗情感和智慧,超越感受和本能的导航器。

要活出有意义的非凡生命,需要有能超乎“匹夫”的英雄特质。一个英雄所具备的品德不单要有勇气、有胜不骄的度量和败不馁的懿行,更要知道生命并不仅仅是连连胜利的短暂欢欣或失败的挫折。希腊哲学家对“卓越”与“自负”有一个非常发人深省的观念,他们相信每一个人都有责任把自己的潜能发挥得淋漓尽致。但同时,人的内心应有一戒条,不能自欺地认为自己具有超越实际的能力,系统性扩大变为自我膨胀幻想,如陷两难深渊,你会被动地、不自觉地步往失败之宿命。

在卓越与自负之间取得最佳平衡并不容易。因为信心、“勇敢无畏”也是品德,但沉醉于过往和眼前成就、与生俱来的地位或财富的傲慢自信,其实是一种能力的溃疡。我们要谨记传统智慧,老子的八字真言:“知人者智,自知者明”。我想和大家分享的诀窍是什么?我称它为“自负指数”,那是一套衡量检讨自我意识、态度和行为的简单心法。我常常问自己,我有否过分骄傲和自大?我有否拒绝接纳逆耳的忠言?我有否不愿意承担自己言行所带来的后果?我有否缺乏预见问题、结果和解决办法的周详计划?

我深信谦虚的心是知识之源,是通往成长、启悟、责任和快乐之路。在卓越与自负之间,智者会亲前者而远后者。背道而驰的结果,可能是一生净成就得之极少,而懊悔却巨大,成为你发挥最佳潜能的障碍,减弱你主控人生处境的能力。在现今无限可能的电脑时代,大家对“重新启动”按钮相当熟悉。然而,在生命这场永无休止的竞争过程中,我们未必有很多重新启动的机会,我相信,给你这个机会,也没有人期望过一个不断“重新启动”的人生。

同学们,你们绝对是最幸福的幸运儿,你们生于一个充满机会和希望的黄金时代,你们都很棒,而且颇具雄心壮志,准备就绪,有巩固的根基应付未来的挑

战和机遇。不够,请大家谨记,迈向成功要通过层层考验和淬砺 。

当你们走出小渊,踏进人生这真正的大学堂,请坚守常思考,常反思的守则,并怀着奉献和关怀的心态处事。只知撷取而不懂付出的人,他的人生仅是个虚影。

只有能活出原则,真正懂得如何奉献国家、民族及世界的人,才是真英雄。应如庄子所说:“势为天子,未必贵也;穷为匹夫,未必贱也;贵贱之分,在行之美恶。”如果你们愿意这样做,并谨记常常检讨自己的诀窍,那么你们定能攀登高峰后再达巅峰!

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第五篇:名人励志

立志的名人故事

《陈平忍辱苦读书》

陈平西汉名相,少时家贫,与哥哥相依为命,为了秉承父命,光耀门庭,不事生产,闭门读书,却为大嫂所不容,为了消弭兄嫂的矛盾,面对一再羞辱,隐忍不发,随着大嫂的变本加厉,终于忍无可忍,出走离家,欲浪迹天涯,被哥哥追回后,又不计前嫌,阻兄休嫂,在当地传为美谈。终有一老着,慕名前来,免费收徒授课,学成后,辅佐刘邦,成就了一番霸业。

《陆羽弃佛从文》

唐朝著名学者陆羽,从小是个孤儿,被智积禅师抚养长大。陆羽虽身在庙中,却不愿终日诵经念佛,而是喜欢吟读诗书。陆羽执意下山求学,遭到了禅师的反对。禅师为了给陆羽出难题,同时也是为了更好地教育他,便叫他学习冲茶。在钻研茶艺的过程中,陆羽碰到了一位好心的老婆婆,不仅学会了复杂的冲茶的技巧,更学会了不少读书和做人的道理。当陆羽最终将一杯热气腾腾的苦丁茶端到禅师面前时,禅师终于答应了他下山读书的要求。后来,陆羽撰写了广为流传的《茶经》,把祖国的茶艺文化发扬光大!

《少年包拯学断案》

包拯包青天,自幼聪颖,勤学好问,尤喜推理断案,其家父与知县交往密切,包拯从小耳濡目染,学会了不少的断案知识,尤其在焚庙杀僧一案中,包拯根据现场的蛛丝马迹,剥茧抽丝,排查出犯罪嫌疑人后,又假扮阎王,审清事实真相,协助知县缉拿凶手,为民除害。他努力学习律法刑理知识,为长大以后断案如神,为民伸冤,打下了深厚的知识基础。

《万斯同闭门苦读》

清朝初期的著名学者、史学家万斯同参与编撰了我国重要史书《二十四史》。但万斯同小的时候也是一个顽皮的孩子。万斯同由于贪玩,在宾客们面前丢了面子,从而遭到了宾客们的批评。万斯同恼怒之下,掀翻了宾客们的桌子,被父亲关到了书屋里。万斯同从生气、厌恶读书,到闭门思过,并从《茶经》中受到启发,开始用心读书。转眼一年多过去了,万斯同在书屋中读了很多书,父亲原谅了儿子,而万斯同也明白了父亲的良苦用心。万斯同经过长期的勤学苦读,终于成为一位通晓历史遍览群书的著名学者,并参与了《二十四史》之《明史》的编修工作。

《唐伯虎潜心学画》

唐伯虎是明朝著名的画家和文学家,小的时候在画画方面显示了超人的才华。唐伯虎拜师,拜在大画家沈周门下,学习自然更加刻苦勤奋,掌握绘画技艺很快,深受沈周的称赞。不料,由于沈周的称赞,这次使一向谦虚的唐伯虎也渐渐地产生了自满的情绪,沈周看在眼中,记在心里,一次吃饭,沈周让唐伯虎去开窗户,唐伯虎发现自己手下的窗户竟是老师沈周的一幅画,唐伯虎非常惭愧,从此潜心学画。

《林则徐对联立志》

这个故事讲的是清代著名的民族英雄林则。林则徐小时候就天资聪慧,两次机会下,作了两幅对联,这两幅对联表达了林则徐的远大志向。林则徐不仅敢于立志,而且读书刻苦,长大后成就了一番大事业,受到了后世的敬仰。

《文天祥少年正气》

南宋末年著名的民族英雄文天祥少年时生活困苦,在好心人的帮助下才有机会读书。一次,文天祥被有钱的同学误会是小偷,他据理力争,不许别人践踏自己的尊严,终于证明了自己的清白,而且通过这件事,更加树立了文天祥金榜题名的志向。

《叶天士拜师谦学》

叶天士自恃医术高明,看不起同行薛雪。有一次,叶天士的母亲病了,他束手无策,多亏薛雪不计前嫌,治好了他母亲的病。从此,叶天士明白了天外有天,人上有人的道理。于是他寻访天下名医,虚心求教,终于成了真正的江南第一名医。

《李清照少女填词》

宋代女诗人李清照才思敏捷,一生留下了许多千古绝唱。她个性爽直、自由、不羁一格,从小就表现出过人的文学天赋。这个故事讲述的就是她触景生情,即兴填词的故事。

《杨禄禅陈家沟学艺》

杨禄禅受到乡里恶霸的欺负,他不甘心受辱。一个人离开了家,到陈家沟拜师学艺。拳师陈长兴从不把拳法传外人,杨禄禅也不例外。不过,杨禄禅的执着精神终于感动了陈长兴,终于学到了拳法,惩治了恶霸,也开创了杨式太极拳。

《王献之依缸习字》

王献之,字子敬,是东晋大书法家书——圣王羲之的第七个儿子。他自己也是东晋著名的书法家。王献之三四岁的时候,母亲就教他背诗诵诗,到五六岁的时候,就能够出口成章,顺口吟出几句诗来。和他的哥哥王凝之相比,越发显得机警聪敏,而且还特别喜欢习字。王献之家有一只大水缸,本片的故事,正与这个大水缸密不可分!

《朱元璋放牛读书》

放牛娃出身的朱元璋,从小连私塾都没有念过,但是他聪颖过人,勤学好问,终于成为建立明朝的开国皇帝。

《柳公权戒骄成名》

柳公权从小就显示出在书法方面的过人天赋,他写的字远近闻名。他也因此有些骄傲。不过,有一天他遇到了一个没有手的老人,竟然发现老人用脚写的字比用他手写的还好。从此,他时时把“戒骄”记在心中,勤奋练字,虚心学习,终于成为一代书法大家。

《匡衡凿壁偷光》

西汉时期,有一个特别有学问的人,叫匡衡,匡衡小的时候家境贫寒,为了读书,他凿通了邻居文不识家的墙,借着偷来一缕烛光读书,终于感动了邻居文不识,在大家的帮助下,小匡衡学有所成。在汉元帝的时候,由大司马、车骑将军史高推荐,匡衡被封郎中,迁博士。

《屈原洞中苦读》

这个故事讲述了,屈原小时侯不顾长辈的反对,不论刮风下雨,天寒地冻,躲到山洞里偷读《诗经》。经过整整三年,他熟读了《诗经》305篇,从这些民歌民谣中吸收了丰富的营养,终于成为一位伟大诗人。

《王十朋苦学书法》

王十朋从小聪颖过人,文思敏捷,可是书法却不如人意。于是,他痛下决心,一定要练好书法。终于,宝印叔叔的指点下,他终于悟到了书法真谛,成为一名大书法家和文学家。

《王羲之吃墨》

被后人称为“书圣”的王羲之,小的时候是一个呆头呆脑的孩子,每天都带着自己心爱的小鹅悠悠逛逛。王羲之每天刻苦练字,却被老师卫夫人称作是死字,王羲之很是苦恼,在小鹅的启发下,王羲之在书房写成了金光灿灿的“之”字,但却误将馒头沾墨汁吃到了嘴里,留下了王羲之吃墨的故事。

《范仲淹断齑划粥》

范仲淹从小家境贫寒,为了读书,他省吃俭用。终于,他的勤奋好学感动了寺院长老,长老送他到南都学舍学习。范仲淹依然坚持简朴的生活习惯,不接受富家子弟的馈赠,以磨砺自己的意志。经过刻苦攻读,他终于成为了伟大的文学家。

《车胤囊萤照读》

车胤,字武子,晋代南平(今湖北省公安市)人,从小家里一贫如洗,但读书却非常用功,车胤囊萤照读的故事,在历史上被传为美谈,激励着后世一代又一代的读书人。囊萤照读到底是怎么回事呢?从我们要给大家讲的这个有趣的故事,你一定会明白。

《司马光警枕励志》

司马光是个贪玩贪睡的孩子,为此他没少受先生的责罚和同伴的嘲笑,在先生的谆谆教诲下,他决心改掉贪睡的坏毛病,为了早早起床,他睡觉前喝了满满一肚子水,结果早上没有被憋醒,却尿了床,于是聪明的司马光用园木头作了一个警枕,早上一翻身,头滑落在床板上,自然惊醒,从此他天天早早地起床读书,坚持不懈,终于成为了一个学识渊博的,写出了《资治通鉴》的大文豪。

《张三丰创太极》

张三丰,名全一,又名君实,号三丰,又号元元子,因不修边幅,又名张邋遢,辽东懿州(今辽宁彰武西南)人,明朝英宗时被封为“通微显化真人”。关于他的传奇故事当时曾经广泛流传于民间,甚至把他看成了神仙。我们大家都知道太极拳吧?太极拳最大的特点就是柔中带刚!你知道张三丰到底怎么创造的太极拳吗?本片要说的,正是这个故事。

《诸葛亮喂鸡》

诸葛亮,字孔明,东汉三国时期徐州琅琊郡阳都县人,是我国历史上著名的政治家和军事家。如果你看过《三国演义》,肯定不会忘记诸葛亮。至今,诸葛亮的智慧一直被后人所传颂,许多人甚至把他当作了智慧的化身。可是你知道吗,在诸葛亮的小时候,为了上学,发生过一些故事,好玩极了!

《玄奘苦学佛法》

玄奖是唐代一位高僧,为了求取佛经原文,玄奘从贞观三年八月离开长安,万里跋涉,西行取经,终于到达印度,历时十七年,著有《大唐西域记》,为佛教和人类进步、世界文明作出了伟大的贡献。

《岳飞学艺》

民族英雄岳飞生逢乱世,自幼家贫,在乡邻的资助下,拜陕西名师周桐习武学艺,期间,目睹山河破碎,百姓流离失所,萌发了学艺报国的志向,克服了骄傲自满的情绪。寒暑冬夏,苦练不缀,在名师周桐的悉心指导下,终于练成了岳家抢,并率领王贵,汤显等伙伴,加入到了抗金救国的爱国洪流中。

《厉归真学画虎》

五代画虎名家历归真从小喜欢画画,尤其喜欢画虎,但是由于没有见过真的老虎,总把老虎画成病猫,于是他决心进入深山老林,探访真的老虎,经历了千辛万苦,在猎户伯伯的帮助下,终于见到了真的老虎,通过大量的写生临摹,其的画虎技法突飞猛进,笔下的老虎栩栩如生,几可乱真。从此以后,他又用大半生的时间游历了许多名山大川,见识了更多的飞禽猛兽,终于成为一代绘画大师。

《沈括上山看桃花》

“人间四月芳菲尽,山寺桃花始盛开”,当读到这句诗时,沈括的的眉头凝成了一个结,“为什么我们这里花都开败了,山上的桃花才开始盛开呢?”,为了解开这个谜团,沈括约了几个小伙伴上山实地考察一番,四月的山上,咋暖还寒,凉风袭来,冻得人瑟瑟发抖,沈括矛茅塞顿开,原来山上的温度比山下要低很多,因此花季才来得比山下来得晚呀。凭借着这种求索精神和实证方法,长大以后的沈括写出了《梦溪笔谈》。

《徐霞客志在天下》

有一天,江边发生了一件怪事,很多人在打捞落水的石狮,却怎么也找不着。这时,一个叫徐霞客的小孩说,只要溯江而上,就能找到石狮。果然石狮找到了,大家都赞誉这个聪颖的小孩。原来他就是长大后成为伟大地理学家、旅行家的徐霞客。

《华佗拜师学艺》

华佗,字元化,东汉末年、三国时期沛国(今安徽亳县)人,是我国古代著名的医学家。华佗发明的“麻沸散”,是一种很有效的全身麻醉药,比西方的麻醉药要早一千六百年左右,华佗对世界医学的贡献非常巨大。不要以为华佗一生下来就是神医,华佗小时候学医,经历了千辛万苦。

《皇甫谧浪子回头》

皇甫谧,魏、晋年间人,是西晋著名的学者和医学家。皇甫谧小的时候玩劣异常,被村子里的人称为小霸王,一次,他将同窗受气包家的枣树的树皮铲掉,使得枣树枯萎,全村人看到他,都不理他了,在婶婶的教育下,皇甫谧终于浪子回头,成

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