Nicholas Ostrovsky. Quotes
1 Happiness lies in creating a new life and in transforming and re-educating the society that has become the master of the country. The great and wise men of the socialist era struggled.
2The main tragedy of life is to stop fighting.
The beauty of 3 people does not lie in appearance, clothes and hairstyle, but in himself and his heart. If a person does not have the beauty of his soul, we will often dislike his beautiful appearance.
4 Self-interested people are the first to perish. He lives by himself and for himself. If this "I" of his is damaged, he cannot survive.
5 The so-called friendship, first of all, is sincerity and criticizing the mistakes of comrades.
6. A common cause and a common struggle can give people the power to endure everything.
7 The so-called friendship, first of all, is sincerity and criticizing the mistakes of comrades.
8 I have experienced the pain of abandonment and betrayal in my own life. But one thing saved me: my life is always purposeful and meaningful, which is the struggle for socialism.
9 Only people like me who madly love life, love struggle, and love the construction of a new and better world, and only those of us who have seen through and understood the full meaning of life, will not Die casually, don't give up on life even if there is only a small chance.
10. Always feel that the land of the motherland is firmly under your feet, live with the collective, and remember that it is the collective that educates you. If one day you break away from the group, it will be the beginning of the end.
11 A true friend should tell the truth, no matter how harsh it is.
12. Always feel that the land of the motherland is firmly under your feet, live with the collective, and remember that it is the collective that educates you. If one day you break away from the group, it will be the beginning of the end.
The great power of 13 people is here - they feel that they are in a friendly group.
For me, being a soldier is the greatest happiness... All personal problems are not as permanent as the socialist cause.
14. A true friend should tell the truth, no matter how harsh it is.
The most precious thing in life is life. Life belongs to people only once. A person's life should be spent like this: when he recalls the past, he will not regret for wasting his years, nor will he be ashamed of being inactive; when he is dying, he can say: "My whole life and all my energy , have been dedicated to the most magnificent cause in the world, fighting for the liberation of mankind.”
The best and most precious medicine to cure all diseases is labor.
Life has given us a huge and infinitely noble gift. This is youth: youth full of strength, full of expectations and aspirations, full of aspirations for knowledge and struggle, full of hope and confidence. .
Courage is born in struggle, and courage is developed in the tenacious resistance to difficulties every day. The motto of our youth is to be brave, tenacious and determined, and to overcome all obstacles.
The best thing about life is that when you stop living, you can still serve people with everything you create.
In any situation in life, we must stand in the ranks of the frontline warriors. Category: Life
This is where people’s great power lies—feeling that they are in a friendly group. Category: Collective
I only believe in one thing: inspiration is generated during labor. . . . Labor is the best doctor of all insensibilities. Category: Labor
Happiness is multifaceted. I am also very happy. The joy of creating was astonishing, and I felt my own hands laying bricks for the beautiful building we were all building together, and my personal sorrow was removed. Category: Youth
Don’t stop at the achievements you have already made, but work bravely and strive to hold the championship of labor in your own hands for a long time. Category: Labor
Ideals have an extraordinary charm for me. My ideal... is always full of life and earthy atmosphere. I never dream of the impossible.
Whoever thinks he is a saint or a buried genius, and whoever is separated from the collective, will have a sad fate. The collective can always improve you and make you stand firm on your feet.
Light gives us experience, and reading gives us knowledge.
Patriotism is multiplied by hatred of the enemy. Only such patriotism can lead to victory.
Being generous with time is tantamount to chronic suicide.
Happiness lies in creating a new life and in the struggle to transform and re-educate the great and wise man who has become the master of the country and the socialist era.
For me, being a soldier is the greatest happiness... All personal problems are not as permanent as the socialist cause.
Friendship, a noble and beautiful friendship based on mutual respect, deep sympathy, never malicious envy of others' achievements, and cultivating a sense of collective interests above all else for oneself.
People control habits, not habits control people.
No matter how talented a person is, the collective is often smarter and more powerful than him.
Steel is tempered in fierce fire and rapid cooling, so it can be hard and fearless. Our generation has also been trained in struggles and terrible tests, and has learned not to give in in the face of life.
One should live quickly and fully, because unexpected illness or tragic accident can end his life abruptly at any time. Ostrovsky's famous sayings:
1. A person's life may burn or decay. I cannot decay, I am willing to burn! —— Ostrovsky
2. The only shortcoming we will not correct is weakness. —— Ostrovsky
3. People should control their habits, but they must not let habits control people. If a person cannot get rid of his bad habits, it is simply worthless. —— Ostrovsky
4. A person's life should be spent like this: when recalling the past, he does not regret wasting his years, nor is he ashamed of being inactive; When he died, he was able to say: "My whole life and all my energy have been dedicated to the most magnificent cause in the world - the struggle for the liberation of mankind." - Ostrovsky
< p> 5. The best thing about life is that when you stop living, you can still serve people with everything you create. ——Ostrovsky6. Whoever breaks away from the collective will have a sad fate. ------ Ostrovsky
7. Always feel that the land of the motherland is firmly under your feet, live with the collective, and remember that it is the collective that educates you. . If you break away from the group that day, it will be the beginning of the end. ---- Ostrovsky
8. Whoever thinks he is a saint or a buried genius will have a sad fate if he is separated from the collective. The collective can always improve you and make you stand firm on your feet. ---- Ostrovsky
9. A common cause; a common struggle can give people the power to endure everything.
---- Ostrovsky Ostrovsky's famous sayings in Russian
Самое дорогое у человека — это жизнь. ак, чтобы не было мучительно больно за бесцельно прожитые годы, чтобы не жёг позор за подленькое и мелочное пр ошлое, чтобы, умирая, смог сказать: вся жизнь и все силы были отданы самому прекрасному в мире — ьбе за освобождение человечества.
People are the most The precious thing is life. Life is only once for people. Therefore, a person's life should be spent like this: when a person looks back on the past, he will not regret for wasting his years, nor will he be ashamed of doing nothing; in this way, in his life When I am dying, I can say that I have dedicated my whole life and all my energy to the most precious cause in life - fighting for the liberation of mankind. We must live in a hurry because even a sudden illness or accident can end our lives.
There are two things that fill me with ever-newer and ever-increasing feelings of wonder and seriousness the more I think about them and the longer I think about them, that is the head above my head. the starry sky and the moral law in the heart. —— Kant Ostrovsky’s full name
The full name of “Ostrovsky” is Nikolai Alekseevich Ostrovsky (Nikolai Alexeevich Ostrovsky) Trovsky), the first "Nicholas" is his name; the middle "Alexeevich" is the patronymic; and the last "Ostrowski" is the surname. Introduction to Ostrovsky
Introduction to Ostrovsky
Introduction: Russian dramatist. Born in Moscow on April 12, 1823. He developed a strong interest in drama when he was in middle school. In 1840, he entered the Law Department of Moscow State University and left school three years later to work in the court. He was often exposed to business litigation, which made him familiar with the business world and provided material for his future drama creation. Ostrovsky began writing while serving at the court. In 1850, he published the comedy "My Family Is Easy to Settlement", which satirized the ignorance and profit-seeking of businessmen and raised the crisis of patriarchal business ethics. Readers responded enthusiastically, but it was opposed by the business community and banned by the censors, and the writers were placed under surveillance. "Poverty Is Not a Crime" (1854) was influenced by Slavophiles, and Chernyshevsky criticized it. "Fat" (1856), especially "Thunderstorm" (1859), marked the maturity of Ostrovsky's dramatic creation. In the 1960s, his dramas had various themes, including history and reality. Among them, the comedy "A Wise Man Will Make a Mistake" (1868) portrays the image of a businessman who does whatever it takes to get promoted and make a fortune, as well as the serf owners who oppose reform and the freedom to talk. A typical example of an activist. The works of the 1970s include "The Forest" (1870), "The Wolf and the Sheep" (1875), "The Woman Without a Dowry" (1878), etc., which mainly reflect the decline of aristocratic morality and the essence of bourgeois plunder. He also wrote the fairy tale "Snow Girl" (1873), which was based on folk oral poetry. In his later years, the dramatist paid great attention to society's attitude towards art and wrote "Famous Actors and Actors" (1881) and "The Innocent Man" (1884), which showed the lives of actors. The plot of Ostrovsky's script unfolds slowly and steadily, and the language is concise, reflecting the character's personality. Ostrovsky's life
Nikolay Alexeyevich Ostrovsky Nikolai Alexeyevich Ostrovsky Ski.
Life
(1904~1936) Soviet writer. Nikolai Ayekseyevich Ostrovsky was born in a poor peasant family in the village of Verya, Ukraine on September 29, 1904. He was the fifth child and began working as a child laborer at the age of 11. In 1919, he joined the Communist Youth League and immediately participated in the civil war.
From 1923 to 1924, he served as the leader of the Communist Youth League in the Ukrainian border area and joined the Communist Party in 1924. Due to his long-term participation in the arduous struggle, his health was seriously damaged. By 1927, his health deteriorated sharply, but he refused to give in and fought against the disease with amazing perseverance. At the end of 1934, he began to write a "historical lyrical heroic story" about Kotovsky's division (i.e., "Born of the Storm"). At the end of 1927, while battling illness, Ostrovsky wrote a novella about the growth and heroic battles of the Kotov Cavalry Brigade. After finishing the novel two months later, he sealed it and asked his wife to send it to his comrades in the Kotov Cavalry Brigade in Odessa to ask for their opinions. The comrades enthusiastically commented on the novel, but he never expected that Unfortunately, the only copy of the manuscript was lost in the post office while being sent to friends for review. This cruel blow did not dampen his strong will, but made him fight against the disease even more tenaciously. In 1929, he became paralyzed and blind. In 1930, he used his own combat experience as material and began to write the novel "How Steel Was Tempered" with his tenacious will. The novel was a huge success and received sincere and enthusiastic praise from its contemporaries. In 1934, Ostrovsky was admitted as a member of the Soviet Union of Writers. At the end of 1935, the Soviet Union awarded him the Order of Lenin in recognition of his creative labor and outstanding contributions in literature. On December 22, 1936, Ostrovsky died in Moscow due to a recurrence of serious illness. Nikolai Ostrovsky is Russian, but his birthplace is in Ukraine. My father was a koji maker in a brewery, and he also worked odd jobs in other villages or cities. He also worked as a postman for five years. He had been to Petersburg, served in the military, had contact with progressive college students, and knew some stories about the revolutionaries' struggle against the Tsar. My mother came from a poor family and had to work for others at a young age, herding geese, growing vegetables, and taking care of children. After their marriage, six children were born, two of whom died in infancy. Ostrovsky is the youngest, with two sisters and one brother. In addition to doing housework and taking care of the children, the mother also did sewing and worked as a maid for others. When he was ten years old, due to the outbreak of World War I, his family fled to Shepetovka and settled there. At this time, life was even more difficult. Ostrovsky joined the local train station canteen as a waiter at the age of eleven. At the age of fourteen, he entered a power plant and worked as a stoker and electrician. He also did odd jobs such as sawing firewood and unloading coal. He had a strong thirst for knowledge since childhood and was eager to study, but he only attended school intermittently for a few years. In school, he not only has excellent grades, but is also very active and is a good assistant to the teacher. He has tried to write fairy tales, short stories and poems, and published his exercises in the "Color of Youth", a handwritten "magazine" written by students. He also likes to act in dramas and loves to play heroic roles on stage. He dropped out of school several times, mostly because of poverty, and once because he offended a priest who taught theology classes. So the child tried his best to borrow books and even gave his lunch to the newspaper vendor in exchange for newspapers and periodicals to read. When he was twelve years old, he read the masterpiece "The Gadfly" by the British female writer Voynich. From then on, the image of the gadfly was deeply imprinted in his heart. Nikolay Alexeevich Ostrovsky was born in 1904 into a working-class family. After graduating from Junior Church Primary School, he had to drop out of school and work because of his poor family background. In 1919, he joined the Soviet Communist Youth League and participated in the Red Army's battle against the White Bandits. From 1923 to 1924, he served as a member of the Communist Youth League. Joined *** in 1924. In 1927, he became paralyzed due to illness and became blind. With amazing perseverance, he wrote the novels "How Steel Was Tempered" and "Born of the Storm". Based on his personal experience, he described the experience of Soviet youth training and growing up in the furnace of revolution. "How Steel Was Tempered" was translated into Chinese as early as 1942. The protagonist in the book, Paul Korchagin, became a model for Chinese youth to learn from. On December 22, 1936, Ostrovsky died of illness. (The first chapter of "Born of the Storm" had just been written at that time, and the manuscript was still being typeset in the printing factory.) The suffering and heaviness of real life, and the perseverance and brilliance of the characters in the book made this boy sensible and precocious. He helped the Bolshevik underground organization to post leaflets and spy on intelligence. When he was fifteen years old, he was walking on the street when he suddenly saw a member of the underground revolutionary committee being escorted towards him by a heavily armed bandit. Regardless of everything, he rushed towards the bandits. The revolutionary was accidentally rescued, but he was arrested for it.
The young man was tortured, but he survived without saying a word. The Red Army and the rebels defeated the bandits. In July of the same year, Ostrovsky joined the Communist Youth League; in August, he volunteered to join the Red Army and went to the front with the troops to withstand the test of the fire of war. He served as a cavalryman and a scout, fighting in various places. This young man not only leaped on his horse and brandished his sword, fought bravely and received written commendations, he was also good at motivating his comrades and showed his talent for propaganda and agitation. In August of the following year, Ostrovsky suffered severe abdominal and head injuries and spent two months in a field hospital bed, often in a coma. After being discharged from the hospital, I only retained two-fifths of the vision in my right eye, so I changed my job and moved to another place. He participated in the work of the Anti-Revolutionary Committee, worked as an electrician's assistant at the Railway General Factory, and was elected secretary of the Youth League branch. At the same time, he studied at an electrical technical school. At the age of seventeen, he took the lead in the arduous work of building a railway branch line. On railway construction sites, many people lost their lives due to harsh conditions, diseases and sneak attacks by gangs. Ostrovsky gritted his teeth and worked hard. But when the work was about to be completed, his knees became red and swollen. He had difficulty walking and was infected with typhoid fever. He fell into a coma and was sent back to his hometown. Under the careful care of his mother, he barely survived. After returning to the factory, he worked and studied in a technical school. The injured body could not withstand excessive toil, and his health condition became worse and worse. He was sent to a sanatorium for mud therapy. After his condition improved slightly, he returned to Kiev and together with many members of the Communist Youth League, rescued wood in the knee-deep and bitingly cold river water. He fell ill again. When he was eighteen years old, the Medical Evaluation Committee issued him a first-class disability certificate. He hid the certificate and asked for a job. After that, he served as secretary of the Youth League Committee, political commissar of the National Military Training Camp, member of the regional Youth League Committee, and alternate member of the Provincial Youth League Committee. He joined the party at the age of 20 and served as secretary of the Youth League and Provincial Committee for a time. Unfortunately, he was involved in another car accident and injured his right knee, which caused a chronic disease. The joint was red, swollen and painful. He had difficulty moving. At the age of twenty-three, he became paralyzed and gradually lost vision in both eyes. From then on, he traveled to and from hospitals in various places, receiving treatment without improvement. At the age of 26, he underwent his ninth operation. After the incision was sutured, a cotton ball remained in his body. If a weak patient is given anesthesia again, the heart may be damaged and life-threatening. He offered to cut open the incision without anesthesia and take out the cotton ball. He didn't make a sound, but he had a high fever after the operation that wouldn't go away for eight days. After that, he categorically refused any surgery, saying: "I have donated part of my blood to science. Let me keep the rest to do other things." In hospitals and sanatoriums around the country, he got to know many people. Friends, some of them are revolutionaries of the older generation. During his breaks in treatment, he used his remaining eyesight to read a large number of excellent literary works. Ostrovsky's tombstones include Pushkin, Tolstoy, Chekhov, Gorky, Sholokhov, Balzac The works of writers such as Gram, Hugo, Zola, Dreiser and others. He attended a correspondence university and at the same time wrote a novella reflecting combat life. It is a pity that the only manuscript of the novel was lost on the way back after being read by comrades in arms in other places.
At the age of twenty-six, he began to write the novel "How Steel Was Tempered"; at the age of twenty-seven, he completed the first part and it was published the following year. The novel was published in 1934 and achieved great success. He was also admitted as a member of the Soviet Writers Association. Subsequently, Ostrovsky began to write another trilogy of novels "Born of the Storm" in recognition of his creative labor and outstanding contributions in literature. At the age of thirty, the second part of "How Steel Was Tempered" came out. At the age of thirty-one, he was awarded the Order of Lenin; at the age of thirty-two, on December 14, 1936, he completed the revision work of another novel "Born of the Storm" (Part One). 8 Queen of Heaven, that is, on December 22, he passed away. The body was buried in the Novodevichy Cemetery in Moscow. Ni. Introduction to Ostrovsky
Alexander Nikolai Alexeevich Ostrovsky (Александр Николаевич Островский) was born on March 31, 1823 in Alexander Nikolayevich Ostrovsky
Little Oltonka Street (now renamed Ostrovsky Street). My father was a judge. After retirement, he engaged in business activities. Most of the people in the family were businessmen. In 1840, Ostrovsky entered Moscow University to study law. He dropped out of school in 1843. From 1843 to 1851, he served as clerk in the "Court of Conscience" and the Court of Commerce. While working at the court he began writing.
In 1847, he published a fragment of the play "The Bankrupt", which attracted the attention of the literary world. After the whole play was written, it was officially published in the magazine "Muscovite" in 1850 under the title "It's easy to settle accounts with my family". It was praised by the progressive literary circles, but the police department banned its performance, and it was not performed until 1861. Since then, Ostrovsky has published one or more works almost every year.
In addition to writing, Ostrovsky has also translated many foreign plays, including Shakespeare, W., Gozzi, C., Goldoni, C., and Sevan. Works by Tis Saavedra, M. de et al. He is also an active social activist. In 1865, he initiated the establishment of the Moscow Actors' Union. In 1870, he initiated the organization of the Russian Dramatists' Association. Through the efforts of him and Rubinstein, an actor training class was founded in the same year, which trained a group of outstanding performing artists such as Sadovsky, Sadovskaya, and Markcheyev. On his initiative, the Model People's Theater was also founded.
In January 1886, Ostrovsky was appointed artistic general manager of the Royal Theaters in Moscow. However, he was not able to fully carry out the reform of the theater system and the improvement of dramatic art, so he died on June 14 in Serekovo (now Ostrovsky District of Kostrom Region). He created many works in his life. 47 plays, known as the "Father of Russian Drama". An introduction to Nikolai Ostrovsky?
Nikolai Ostrovsky (1904-1936) Soviet writer. Nikolai Ayekseevich Ostrovsky was born in a poor peasant family in the village of Verya, Ukraine on September 29, 1904. He was the fifth child and began working as a child laborer at the age of 11. Joined the Communist Youth League in 1919 and immediately participated in the civil war. From 1923 to 1924, he served as the leader of the Communist Youth League in the Ukrainian border area and joined the Communist Party in 1924. Due to his long-term participation in the arduous struggle, his health was seriously damaged. By 1927, his health deteriorated sharply, but he did not give in and fought against the disease with amazing perseverance. At the end of 1934, he began to write a "historical lyrical heroic story" about Kotovsky's division (i.e., "Born of the Storm"). Unfortunately, the only copy of the manuscript was lost in the post office while being sent to friends for review. This cruel blow did not dampen his strong will, but made him fight against the disease even more tenaciously.
In 1929, he became paralyzed and blind. In 1930, he used his own combat experience as material and began to write the novel "How Steel Was Tempered" with his tenacious will. The novel was a huge success and received sincere and enthusiastic praise from its contemporaries. In 1934, Ostrovsky was admitted as a member of the Soviet Union of Writers. At the end of 1935, the Soviet Union awarded him the Order of Lenin in recognition of his creative labor and outstanding contributions in literature. On December 22, 1936, Ostrovsky died in Moscow due to a recurrence of serious illness.
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