Da Vinci loved painting since he was a child, and his father found a famous painter, Buddha Rocchio, as his teacher. The teacher asked him to start by drawing eggs. He painted for more than ten days.
Seeing that he was a little impatient, the teacher said to him, "Don't think it's easy to draw an egg, you know, no two eggs in 1000 are exactly the same;" Even the same egg, as long as the shape is different from another angle, the oval outline of the egg will be different. Therefore, if you want to express it perfectly on drawing paper, you have to work hard. "
From then on, Leonardo da Vinci devoted himself to studying sketches, and after a long period of hard and diligent artistic practice, he finally created many immortal famous paintings.
2. Marx
Marx, the mentor of the world proletarian revolutionary movement, spent more than 40 years reading Das Kapital and read a lot of materials in the British Museum, but a layer of cement was worn off on the concrete floor under the seat. Through unremitting efforts, Marx finally wrote Das Kapital, which the proletarians all over the world needed.
3. Sima Guang
Sima Guang was playful when he was a child. In order to change this habit and get up early to study, he made a police pillow out of wood in the garden. When I turned over in the morning, my head fell on the bed board and I woke up naturally. From then on, he got up early every day to study, persevered, and finally became a knowledgeable writer, writing "Zi Tongzhi Jian".
4. Qu Yuan
When Qu Yuan was a child, no matter whether it was windy, rainy or cold, he would go to a cave to secretly read the Book of Songs regardless of the opposition of his elders and never be lazy. Three years later, he familiarized himself with 305 poems of The Book of Songs, absorbed rich nutrition from these folk songs, and finally became a great poet.
5. Xuanzang
Xuanzang was a monk in the Tang Dynasty. In order to obtain the original Buddhist scriptures, Xuanzang left Chang 'an in August of the third year of Zhenguan, trudged through hardships in Wan Li, but made unremitting efforts to go west to learn the scriptures and finally arrived in India. He wrote 17 years of "The Tale of the Western Regions of Datang", which made great contributions to Buddhism, human progress and world civilization.