There are many, I hope they will be helpful to you. Lin Shu studied hard and became a great writer. Lin Shu (shu) is a famous writer and translator in modern my country.
He is a native of Fuzhou and was elected in the late Qing Dynasty.
Lin Shu's family was very poor when he was a child, but he loved books. If he couldn't afford to buy books, he had to borrow them from others, copy them himself, and return them at the agreed time.
He once drew a coffin on the wall, with the words "Study to survive, not to die in the coffin" written next to it. He used these eight words as a motto to encourage and spur himself.
The meaning of this famous saying is that he must study while he is alive. If he does not study, he might as well die.
He often wakes up at midnight to excerpt and read hard.
Every night, he sat in front of the clear oil lamp where his mother used to do needlework, holding a book and studying diligently. He would not sleep until he finished reading a volume.
Due to his poor family and the exhaustion of studying, he suffered from lung disease when he was 18 years old. He often coughed up blood for ten consecutive years, but he continued to study hard while lying in bed.
By the age of 22, he had read more than 2,000 volumes of ancient books, and by the age of 30, he had read more than 10,000 volumes.
He once said: "Although hard work and study are hard work, it is like getting up early in the fourth watch and walking forward in the dark night, and you will get brighter and brighter as you go; having fun is fun, but it is like going out in the evening. If you walk at dusk, you will get brighter and brighter."
The darker." He didn't understand foreign languages, but because of his profound literary skills, he actually used a method of translating books that was rarely seen in the world: he wrote orally translated books from English, American, and French
More than 1,700 famous works from more than a dozen countries including China, Russia, and Japan have been translated into Chinese, setting a precedent for Chinese translation of foreign literary works and having a great influence.
"La Traviata" by French author Alexandre Dumas was the first foreign novel he co-translated with others.
Kang Youwei ranked Lin Shu and Yan Fu as the most outstanding translators at that time, and praised them as "Yan Lin is the most talented translator in the world."
The story of Chairman Mao’s reading: Chairman Mao has been very busy for decades, but he always finds time, even every second, to read and study.
His former residence in Zhongnanhai is simply filled with books. Books are everywhere on the bookshelves in the bedroom, on the office desk, dining table, and coffee table. Except for the place where one person is lying on the bed, all of them are occupied by books.
In order to study, Chairman Mao used all available time.
During the few minutes of physical activity before swimming, I sometimes read a few poems by famous people.
After swimming up, I didn't bother to rest, so I picked up the book again.
He never wastes even a few minutes on the toilet.
A reprint of "Selected Works of Zhaoming" by Chunxi of the Song Dynasty and some other books and periodicals were made by using this time to read a little today and a little tomorrow, intermittently.
When Chairman Mao went out to hold meetings or inspect work, he often wrote in the box.
He ignored the vibrations and bumps of the train on the way. He always held a magnifying glass in one hand and pressed the page of the book with the other, reading without stopping.
When I go abroad, just like in Beijing, there are books placed on the bed, on the office desk, on the coffee table, and on the dining table, and I read them whenever I have free time.
Although Chairman Mao was seriously ill in his later years, he still continued to read.
He re-read a set of hardcover "The Complete Works of Lu Xun" that was brought to Beijing from Yan'an and published before liberation, as well as many other books and periodicals.
Once, Chairman Mao's fever reached over 39 degrees, and the doctor did not allow him to read.
He said sadly, I have loved reading all my life, but now you don't let me read, and you tell me to lie here, eating and sleeping all day long. You know how uncomfortable I am! The staff had no choice but to take the books away again.
Putting it next to him, he smiled happily.
Lenin's reading story: When he started reading, he lost sight of everything around him.
Once, several of his sisters played a prank and built an unstable triangular tower behind him with 6 chairs. As long as Lenin moved, the tower would topple.
However, Lenin, who was concentrating on reading, did not notice it and did not move at all.
It wasn't until half an hour later, when he finished reading a chapter of the book he was scheduled to read, that he looked up and the wooden tower collapsed... This story shows that if you want to read a book thoroughly and remember it well, you must be highly concentrated.
The ancients have long said: "There are three ways to read: the heart, the eyes, and the mouth. If the heart is not here, the eyes will not be able to read carefully. The mind is not focused, but it can only read rambles, and it will never be memorized, nor can it be memorized for a long time."
Among the three arrivals, the heart is the most anxious. Once the heart has arrived, is there anything missing from the eyes and mouth? "Qian Zhongshu's reading story. Qian Zhongshu, also known as Huai Ju, used the pseudonym Zhongshu Jun.
A native of Wuxi, Jiangsu.
Scholar, writer, poet.
Born into a scholarly family.
He was named "Zhongshu" after he caught "Zhou" at the age of one and caught the book.
After his uncle passed away, he initiated him into studying.
When he was seven or eight years old, he could already devoured "serious" and "irregular" novels collected at home or rented from bookstalls.
When I was 14 years old, I read a large number of popular literary magazines such as "Novel World", "Red Rose", "Violet", etc., and browsed them arbitrarily.
After being admitted to the Department of Western Literature at Tsinghua University, he enjoyed reading Chinese and Western books.
I never take notes during class, but I often read books unrelated to the course while listening.
Later he studied in England and France.
After returning to China, he successively served as professor at Tsinghua University, Southwest Associated University, Lantian National Normal College and other universities.
In the early 1950s, he served as a researcher at the Institute of Classical Literature, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.
He was indifferent throughout his life and only loved books. He was called a "bookworm".
"As long as there are books to read, there is nothing else to do" (Yang Jiang's "Recording Qian Zhongshu and "The Besieged City").
And reading is entirely out of preference, "like a greedy person who eats delicious food: his food intestines are huge, he doesn't choose the fine and coarse, and he eats both sweet and salty things."
He especially likes to read "extremely vulgar books", and he eats sophisticated and profound philosophy, aesthetics, literary theory and other high-level sermons "like a child eating snacks, slowly finishing them thickly".
Also likes to read poetry.