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Marie Curie said: "On the road to fame, what is shed is not sweat but blood. Their names are not written with pens, but with lives."

Thousands For hundreds of years, beauty has been a woman's highest honor and greatest capital. As long as she is lucky enough to get this, she doesn't need to ask for anything else. Madame Curie already had the capital of beauty, but she did not make use of this capital. Her victory over herself began precisely from this point. In order to do scientific research, she was willing to let acid and alkali eat away at her delicate hands, and let the choking smoke wrinkle her beautiful forehead.

In order to refine pure radium, the Curies obtained a ton of industrial waste that may contain radium. They set up a pot in the yard, smelted pot after pot, and then sent it to the laboratory for dissolution, precipitation, and analysis. The so-called laboratory is an abandoned shed that once held cadavers used for autopsy. Mary stirred the slag in the pot all day long in the smoke and fire, leaving little burn marks of acid and alkali on her dress and hands. However, her efforts were not in vain. In the end, she finally discovered the natural radioactive element-radium.

She could have applied for a patent after she discovered radium and obtained a large sum of money. However, she did not do so. Instead, she made the radium purification method public to the public without hesitation. Later, Marie Curie found it difficult to engage in scientific research due to lack of funds to purchase 1 gram of radium. In the end, a well-known American female reporter launched a fundraiser in the United States to raise the required US$100,000.

Madame Curie was the first woman to give a report on the podium of the French Academy of Sciences.

I admire Madame Curie’s personality. Marie Curie regarded fame and wealth as dirt. She won 10 prizes, 16 medals, and 107 honorary titles in her lifetime, especially two Nobel Prizes. She could have enjoyed any major award or honor to her heart's content, but she gave the bonus to scientific research and France in the war, and gave those medals to her 6-year-old daughter as toys.

Mrs. Curie’s noble character, just like her outstanding scientific achievements, shines with admirable brilliance in the history of human civilization. She is strong, she has a pure will, and she is strict with herself, which makes me stand in awe!