Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional stories - The story of exploring the truth in 50 words

The story of exploring the truth in 50 words

Su Dongpo, one of the eight great masters of the Tang and Song dynasties, when he was young, thought that he had no books to read, so he wrote a couplet: "Know all the words in the world; read all the books on earth." After being instructed by an old man, he changed it to: "Make an effort to read all the words in the world; aspire to read all the books on earth."

Mr. Lu Xun grew up as a serious student. When he was a teenager, he studied at the Jiangnan Water Teacher's School, and in his first semester, the school awarded him a gold medal for his outstanding performance. He immediately took to the streets of Nanjing Gulou to sell, and then bought a few books, and bought a bunch of red chili peppers. Whenever the night is cold, night reading is difficult, he will pick a chili pepper, put in his mouth and chew, spicy forehead

head sweat. He insisted on reading in this way to get rid of the cold. As a result of his hard study, he became a famous writer in China.

Zhang Guanghou ate books

Mathematician Zhang Guanghou once saw a paper on the value of the deficit, and felt that it was useful for his own research work, so he read it again and again and again. This paper *** more than 20 pages, he read over and over again for more than half a year. Because of the frequent repeated touching, white pages, leaving a clear black mark. His wife joked to him, which is called reading ah, simply eat books.

Gorky saved the book

Gorky, the world's leading writer, had a deep affection for books and loved them as his own. Once, his room was on fire, the first thing he picked up was books, and he didn't consider anything else. In order to save the books, he was nearly burned to death. He said, "Books enlighten my intellect and mind on one side, and on the other side they help me to stand up in a muddy pond, in which I would have sunk if it were not for books, and I would have drowned in folly and nastiness."