1. Cutting through walls to steal light
Kuang Heng, a famous Confucian scholar in the Western Han Dynasty, had a poor family when he was a child and could not afford candles. He often read until dusk and then regretted it. Put the books away. One night, he suddenly felt a faint light coming from somewhere. Opening his eyes to search, he found that the wall of his house was broken, and the candlelight from the neighbor's house came through the cracks in the wall. So he found a chisel and opened up the gap in the wall. Sure enough, there was a beam of light. He took it and looked at the light beam until the neighbor's house turned off the lights. Due to his diligent study, Kuang Heng's knowledge improved rapidly. Later, he was appreciated by Emperor Yuan of the Han Dynasty and was named Anlehou, and finally became the prime minister.
2. Che Yin Naoying
In the Jin Dynasty of my country, there was a poor and studious Che Yin who loved reading since he was a child. However, his family was very poor and could not afford to light a lamp, so he Use very thin gauze to make a small bag, catch fireflies and put them in it, and use the flashing fluorescence to study diligently at night. This is the story of "Che Yin Na Ying".
There are also reading stories about Sun Kang Yingxue, Hanging Jiao Reading, Hanging Liang Jinggu...
1. Love reading - what is "reading" , what is the purpose of reading?
Ba Jin said: Reading is to build one's own thoughts with the help of other people's thoughts.
Bacon said: Reading is not for eloquence and refutation, nor for credulity and blind obedience, but for thinking and weighing.
Einstein said: When reading, you should find something that can sublimate yourself.
2. Enjoy reading—reading is time-consuming and energy-consuming, so why enjoy it?
Descartes said: Reading a good book is like talking to many noble people.
Socrates said: Reading is to easily absorb the hard-earned experience of others.
Bacon said: Reading history makes people wise, reading poetry makes people smart, mathematics makes people thoughtful, science makes people profound, ethics makes people solemn, and logic and rhetoric make people eloquent.
3. Study diligently—how can you benefit from reading?
Smail said: In matters of learning, the work must be precise and the understanding must be thorough.
Voltaire said: If you read a lot without thinking, you think you know a lot; if you think more, you will find that you know very little.