1. A person either has very good professional skills, or has an all-pervasive ability in life. Both of these are ways to make money.
From Alexander Solzhenitsyn
Alexander Solzhenitsyn (1918~2008), Russian writer, Soviet artillery company commander during World War II, won the Second Prize for bravery He received a medal and was exiled to Kazakhstan for eight years in 1945 for being disrespectful in his correspondence. This experience later became the theme of his works.
2. When a person encounters misfortune in life, nothing can give him better comfort than a skill, because when he devotes himself to studying that skill, the ship has unknowingly overcome many dangers. ——Menander
Menander was a new comic poet in the ancient Greek city-state of Athens. He was born in Athens and came from a noble family. Menander was a disciple of Theophrastus, the successor of Aristotle's Lyceum Academy. Menander wrote 105 plays and won 8 prizes. The New Comedy of Ancient Greece has only handed down two complete plays by Menander, "The Hater of the World" and "The Woman of Samos" and the fragmentary dramas "The Judgment", "Cut of the Hair", "Heros", "The Peasants", etc. p>
3. Skills are joy to anyone - Masefield
Edith Masefield was born in Oregon in 1921. She returned to the United States from England in 1966 , lived in a house on 46th Street Northwest in Ballard, Seattle, that she purchased for her mother in 1955, taking care of her elderly mother until her death. In 2008, Macefield also died in this old house at the age of 86.
4. Only poverty can force out skills, which is the master of labor - Theocritos
Theocritos is the founder of Western pastoral poetry (idyllic poetry) people. In his early years, he studied under the poets Philetas and Ascleades of Alexandria. After completing his studies, he returned to his hometown of Sicily to engage in creative writing. Theocritus wrote many categories of poetry, but he is most famous for his madrigals.
Extended information
Biography
Alexander Isayevich Solzhenitsyn, Russian writer, born in Kislo, North Caucasus Watzke. In 1924, he moved to Rostov-on-Don with his widowed mother. Here, he finished high school and was admitted to the Department of Physics and Mathematics of Rostov University, graduating with honors in 1941. At the same time, because of his passion for literature, he also studied literature in the correspondence class of the Moscow Academy of Literature, History and Philosophy. His representative works include "Don't Live by Lies" and so on.