Classic novel 1 Gao Lao tou (France/Balzac)
Introduction to famous sentences:
? Isn't adversity the touchstone of fate?
? One of the many despicable habits of villains is to think that others are as stingy as themselves. ?
? Little people want to vent their feelings, whether they are joys, sorrows, and sorrows, which are always expressed in some unimportant details. ?
2 "Ordinary World" (Zhong/Lu Yao)
Introduction to famous sentences:
? In fact, everyone's life is a world, and even the most ordinary people have to fight for the world they live in. ?
? Fate always goes against people's wishes. But it is often in countless pains, in heavy contradictions and hardships that talents mature. ?
? Life contains a wider meaning than what we actually get; The key is whether our hearts are full. ?
3 Border Town (Chinese/Shen Congwen)
Introduction to famous sentences:
? The sun didn't let us down, and we can't let the sun down. ?
? To survive in this land, we must be firm and firm! ?
? Beauty is ordinary, so ordinary that you can't feel her existence; Beauty is dull, so dull that only warm memories are left; Beautiful and calm, so calm that only you can try your best to stir up her ripples. ?
? What's on it? Nine?
? That's right. ?
? Didn't you say ten The last one is
? The last one is in your heart. Is there a book whose shadow is always projected in your heart, which makes you unconsciously attracted by it? When you are happy and miserable, you can't help being immersed in its plot; When you are confused, you can't help looking for answers. Everyone who loves books has a life of his own. The difference lies in when you found it and what it was like. If you have found it, let it stay with you, and it will become your life? Amulet? ; If you haven't found it yet, don't worry, it must be waiting for you somewhere ahead. ?
4 War and Peace (Russia/Lev? Nikolayevich? Tolstoy)
Introduction to famous sentences:
? Everyone has defects, just like an apple bitten by God. Some people have bigger flaws because God especially likes his scent. ?
? Compared with the height of the soul, everything on the earth is so humble. ?
? Anything that seems stupid must have something to applaud. ?
5 Les Miserables (France/Victor? Hugo)
Introduction to famous sentences:
? The first hunger of mankind is ignorance. ?
? Where the steps cannot be reached, the eyes can reach them; Where the eyes cannot reach, the spirit can fly. ?
? It is an angel's dream not to make mistakes. It is human nature to make as few mistakes as possible; Errors are like gravity, and everything in the world is bound to make mistakes. ?
6 Count of Monte Cristo (France/Dumas)
Introduction to famous sentences:
? All human wisdom is contained in these four words:? Wait? And then what? Hope? ! ?
? Friend, I still have some doubts? Are you too cowardly to show off your pain as pride?
? If you want something, you must set it free. If it comes back to you, it belongs to you. If it doesn't come back, you will never have it. ?
7 gone with the wind (beauty/Margaret? Mitchell)
Introduction to famous sentences:
? Don't waste your time on a man/woman, who isn't willing to waste their time on you. ?
? To the world, you are one person; But for someone, you are the world. ?
? Everything in Floating in the Wind belongs to yesterday, and everything that has survived the storm faces the future. ?
Oliver Twist (English/Dickens)
Introduction to famous sentences:
? Eyes have light, but they can't give others any light. ?
? If my world can't be your world, then I am willing to make your world mine. ?
? I don't want to associate with those who despise my mother, and I don't want to bring shame and failure to her who is so qualified to be my mother's son. ?
Don Quixote (Spain/Cervantes)
Introduction to famous sentences:
? Diligence is the mother of good luck. ?
? God exalts the humble. ?
? History breeds truth, which can compete with time and preserve old news. This is a sign of the past, a lesson for the present and a lesson for future generations. ?
& gt& gt& gt The next page is the recommendation of the top ten classic novels.