Feng Yuxiang: "In civilian life, civilian life does not emphasize beauty or generosity. It only seeks to serve the people and the country. The old ambition is unremitting, honest and humble. This ambition will not waver, and we will fight to the death. "Do your best, I write, I say, grit your teeth, I am who I am, work hard, that's right."
Nie Er is a famous composer in my country, and his epitaph is quoted from a French poet. Colato's poem: "My ears are like shells, missing the sound of the sea."
Rudolf, a German mathematician in the 16th century, spent his whole life calculating pi to 35 decimal places. It was the most accurate pi value in the world at the time. Engraved on his tombstone is: "π=3.14159265358979323846264338327950288".
"37, 22, 35, R.I.P" is the epitaph of American movie star Marilyn Monroe. Many people don't understand what it means. In the end, the mystery was solved by the Monroe Research Society. The three numbers are the inches of Monroe's bust, waist and hips, and the abbreviated letters mean "Sleep Here." The deceased's biggest hobby during her lifetime was the love of beauty. She used numbers to permanently record her favorite body.
The epitaph of the British poet Shelley is a poem from Shakespeare's "The Snowstorm": "He did not disappear, but experienced a change in the sea water and became a rich and rare treasure."
The epitaph of the Irish poet Yeats is the last seventeen words of a poem he wrote on the eve of his death: "To life, to death, give a cold glance, the knight gallops by."
The epitaph of the great writer Bernard Shaw: "I have long known that no matter how long I live, this kind of thing will definitely happen."
The epitaph of the great writer Hemingway: "Forgive me for not getting up!"
What kind of words can praise any painter better than what appears on the tombstone of the Italian painter Raphael: "While alive, nature is afraid that he will surpass his own work; When it dies, it fears that it will die too."
The epitaph of the French writer Stendhal is concise: "Here lies Henry Bell, a native of Milan."
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Voltaire, the author of "Philosophical Correspondence" and the epic "Henry V", naturally occupied a "seat" in the Pantheon, which is dedicated to the burial of great men, and received such praise: " Poet, historian, philosopher, he expanded the human spirit and made it understand that it should be free."
The epitaph of Aristophanes, the "father of comedy" in ancient Greece, comes from the philosopher. Hands of Plato: "The goddess Melo was looking for an immortal palace, and finally found it in Aristophanes' spiritual palace."
The epitaph of Diao Fandu, the great ancient Greek mathematician: "Passers by , where Diao Fandu's ashes are buried, the numbers below can tell you how long his life was. One sixth of his life was a happy childhood, and one twelfth of his life was on his cheek. He grew a thin beard. After another seventh of his life, he got married. Five years after his marriage, he got his first child and felt very happy. But fate gave this child a chance in the world. His glorious life was only half that of his father. Since his son's death, he lived in deep sorrow for four years and ended his earthly career."
Jefferson is as famous as Washington and Lincoln. One of the three great men of the United States and the third president of the United States. The inscription on his tombstone was written by himself: "The author of the American Declaration of Independence, the author of Virginia's Statute for Religious Freedom, and the father of the University of Virginia."
Rousseau: "Sleeping here is a nature lover. and a man of truth."
Mark Twain: "He observes the changes in the world, but what he tells is the truth of the world."
Beethoven: "He always tells the truth. Treating all people with his own human kindness."
The U.S. Air Force awarded Melovich the Purple Heart Medal in recognition of his heroic performance in the Vietnam War. It was later discovered that he was gay and he was dismissed from the army.
His epitaph is: "When I was in the army, they gave me a medal for killing two people, but dismissed me because I loved one person."
Pushkin: "Here is where Pushkin is buried He spent a happy life with his young muse, love and laziness; he did not do any good things, but in spirit, he was really a good man."
Newton died. I once said: "I am just a child picking up shells on the beach." However, what is very different is that what is engraved on the tombstone of this great British scientist is: "The dead should congratulate themselves, because mankind has produced such great decorations."
Japanese medical scientist Hideyo Noguchi has worked and lived in the United States for a long time. In order to explore the cause of the yellow fever that was raging in Africa, he decided to go deep into the epidemic area personally, despite his growing reputation and success, and finally died in the line of duty. What is engraved on his copper tombstone in Uzdelen Cemetery in New York is: "Born in Inayoro, Japan, died in Goldoks, Africa, dedicated to science, lived for science, and died for science." p>
The physicist Boltzmann discovered the statistical explanation of the second law of thermodynamics during his lifetime. His tombstone only wrote the formula he discovered "S=KlnΩ".
The great British poet Shakespeare does not seem to cherish his remains and "hell house" as much as the famous Egyptian pharaoh. On the tombstone of Pharaoh Kufu, there is a terrifying curse: "No matter who harasses Pharaoh's peace, 'Death's hope' will fall on his head." Shakespeare's epitaph is said to have been written by himself: "For the sake of Jesus, dear friend, do not dig up this coffin under the loess; Those who let me rest in peace will be blessed by God, and those who move my bones will be cursed by the dead."
The tombstone of Franklin, the American scientist who once "captured" thunder and lightning in the sky, is engraved with: "Franklin the Printer." What he never forgot and was proud of until his death was his job as a printer in his youth.
There was a person who was not a famous person during his lifetime, but after his death, he became famous because of his epitaph. The tombstone of the unknown "low man", the American John Terrio, was discovered in a "dark and dank corner" by his fellow writer Nathaniel Hawthorne. After reading the "bleak verses" engraved on the monument, the writer sadly said: "It is not easy to use more concise or touching language to describe this chilling and unfortunate story of life, death and burial. "Things": live pitifully, die pitifully, bury pitifully, and no one cries. (Jizu plum)