Current location - Quotes Website - Famous sayings - 10 famous quotes about ideals
10 famous quotes about ideals

1. Where there is no hope, there is no struggle.

From: [UK] Johnson: "Collected Poems"

Introduction: British writer, literary critic and poet. Entered Oxford University in 1728. Dropped out of school due to family poverty. In 1737, he began writing articles for the Gentleman's Magazine. Later, he edited his own weekly magazine "Rambler" (1750-1752).

2. The ideal is to mix great things with the lowest things of human beings, to make everything that people do great.

From: [France] Dugar: "The Thibault Family"

3. We should work hard and make a difference. In this way, we can say that we have not wasted our years and have the possibility to leave our footprints on the sand of time.

From: [France] Napoleon: "Letter to the Minister of the Interior"

Introduction: Napoleon Bonaparte (French: Napoléon Bonaparte/Italian: Napoleone Buonaparte, 1769 August May 15 - May 5, 1821), Napoléon I (Napoléon I), born in Corsica, was a great French military strategist and politician in the 19th century, and the founder of the First French Empire.

4. Ideals, divine beauty, sprout in the hearts of miserable people; ideals make people's thoughts firm and their hearts great.

From: [France] Victor Hugo: "Selected Poems by Victor Hugo"

Introduction: Victor Hugo (February 26, 1802 - May 1885) August 22), a French writer, a representative writer of positive romantic literature in the early 19th century, a representative figure of humanism, and an outstanding bourgeois democratic writer in the history of French literature. He is known as the "Shakespeare of France".

5. The ideal is the unswerving model that progress pursues in its continuous advancement.

From: [France] Hugo: "On Shakespeare"

6. People who have no ideals in life are poor people.

From: [Russia] Turgenev: "Prose Poems"

Introduction: Ivan Sergeyevich Turgenev (Russian name: Иван Сергеевич Тургенев, 1818-1883), a 19th-century Russian critical realist writer.

7. For life, ideals are indispensable. But an ideal is only ideal when it is "complete". Its direction can only be expressed if it points to a mathematical straight line that does not exist in reality.

From: [Russia] Tolstoy: "The Last Diary"

8. It is embarrassing to feel that you are a superfluous ornament in this world. of. Living without goals is scary.

From: [Russian] Chekhov: "Collected Works of Chekhov"

Introduction: Anton Pavlovich Chekhov (qì) Ho (hē) Anton Pavlovich Chekhov (January 17, 1860 - July 15, 1904) was one of the three great masters of Russian short stories and an outstanding playwright.

9. Liberating one's brothers from oppression is a purpose worthy of life and death.

From: [Russia] Leo Tolstoy: "Anna Karenina"

10. Don't get caught up in the trivial matters in front of you, but be in your own heart Cultivate ideals for the future, for ideals are a special kind of sunlight, without the life-giving effect of sunlight the earth would turn to stone.

From: [Russia] Shchedrin: "The Legacy of Poshehoniya"