Never give up! Never give up has two principles. The first principle is: never give up. The second principle is to look back at the first principle when you want to give up: never give up!
Churchill's most wonderful speech in his life was also his last speech. At a graduation ceremony at Cambridge University, there were tens of thousands of students in the whole hall, who were waiting for Churchill to appear. Just then, accompanied by his entourage, Churchill walked into the venue and slowly walked to the podium. He took off his coat and gave it to his entourage, then took off his hat and silently watched all the audience. After a minute, Churchill said, "Never give up!" (Never give up) Churchill put on his coat and hat and left the meeting.
At this moment, the whole meeting place was silent. After one minute, the applause thundered.
Winston Leonard Spencer Churchill (November 3, 1874-January 24, 1965), a British politician, historian, painter, speaker, writer and journalist, was born in a noble family, and his father, Lord Randolph, was the British Chancellor of the Exchequer.
winston leonard spencer churchill was born in Woodstock, Oxfordshire in 1874. From 194 to 1945 and from 1951 to 1955, he served as British Prime Minister twice, and was considered as one of the most important political leaders in the 2th century. He led the British people to win the Second World War and was one of the "Three Giants of Yalta Conference". After the war, he published the Iron Curtain Speech, which officially opened the prelude of the cold war between the United States and the Soviet Union.
His Unnecessary War won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1953, and he wrote 16 volumes of Memoirs of the Second World War and 24 volumes of National History in English. Churchill is one of the people who have mastered the largest number of English words in history (more than 12,). He was listed as one of the most persuasive speakers in the world in the past century by People, an American magazine, and was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize. From 1929 to 1965, he served as President of the University of Bristol for 36 consecutive years.